COPYRIGHT AMMtOAM PRIM AMCOIATMN. W04 CHAPTER XXII. While Uncle Ben was slowly progress ing along the frozen and slippery .bb way, and when he bad reached' a point about three miles from Rest Haven, he suddenly encountered about a dozen men, most of whom were mounted. All but one were in citizens' dress, and be at first supposed them to be farmers. They rushed npou the old man with a shout, and pistols and knives were flour ished before his face as the gang cried out: "Hang him up!" "Slice off his ears!" "Build a fire and roast him if he lies to us!" To' de Lawd, gem'len, but what's de matter?" asked the old man as Boon as he could get in a word. "We want them two Yankees!'.' shout ed three or four men in chorus. "W-what Yankees? I nebber dun seen a Yankee sence dat big army went by de house on hors'back!" Yo' lie, yo' old black faced devil!" said the leader as he got off his horse and seized Uncle Ben by the collar. "Now, then, tell ns where they are hid ing! Don't pretend to us that yo' have not seen 'em, for we know better! Out with it now, or yo' won't live two min utes!" "What yo' mean?" asked the old man, who was badly upset over the sud den attack. "We mean just this: We've been fol lowing two Yankee spies along the mountain nearly all day. One of them was wounded about an hour ago. They were headed this way, and yo' must have met them and know where they now are. Did they send yo' for a doc tor?" "Nebber, sah, nebber! I tole yo' de troof . I nebber did meet tip wid nobody sence I started from de house!" ' "From what house?" , "Dat house back dar which b'longs to Missus Percy. Mebbe yo' knowed de Percys of Winchester?" "The Percys, eh? Are yon a Percy nigger?." ; . - "Yes, sah, an de only one dat's left." "And where were you going?" "Down to Harrisonburg, sah, to git news 'bout dat battle dey font dar de odder day. I hain't seed a single pus son on de road, an if yo' was to kill me I dun couldn't tell yo' nuffin 'bout no Yankees!" They had looked upon it as just a chance that Uncle Ben had encountered the men they were after, and their vig orous measnres were intended to fright en the information out of him. While he was trembling and afraid, his tones satisfied the crowd that ' he was- telling the truth. It wouldn t do to let him down too easily, however. The negroes of the country were breakinj&over all rules and regulations and traveling about at night to confer with each other and plan escapes to the Federal camps. "Now, then," said the leader of the band, "yo' have had a powerful close call, and yo' want to remember it! Nig gers have no business away from home after dark. Yo' were probably going to Harrisonburg to give yo'self up to the Yankees, but we'll spoil that little game! This will do yo' a heap of good!" And thereupon, holding Uncle Ben with his left hand by a firm grip on his collar, he used a rawhide over the old man's back and legs with his right and administered the first whipping of his life. When his arm had grown weary, he stopped and said: "Now, yo' make a beeline for home and don't stop to rest on the wav! If any other prowling niggers ask yo' about that battle at Harrisonburg, yo tell him yo' was in it and got licked ! Gee up!" As the old man headed for Best Ha ven the gang of men rode in the other direction. He stepped out at a lively pace nntil hidden by the darkness and then stopped and turned to shake his fist and whisper: "White man, I'ze only a pore ole nig ger, but somebody has got to bleed fur dis! Nobody ebber put a whip on Uncle Ben befo' sence he was a pickaninny, an I'll kill yo' fur dat as shore as I ebber git de chance!" He at first thought of resuming his journey toward Harrisonburg, but a mo ment's reflection convinced him that if he fell into the hands of the same party again his life would be in peril. He re alized how much disappointed Marian would be. but he would return and re port and perhaps make a new start. He had covered two miles of the backtrack when at a turn in the road a man step ped out from the rocks at his left and ordered him to halt and added : "Who are yd'?".,. ! "Uncle Ben Percy." j "What, is that yo, Uncle Ben?" "Fur shore, but I hain't dun met np wid no Yankee spies, jess as I told yo' befo'." "Uncle Ben, don't yo' nn know me?" asked the man as he came nearer. "I've talked with yo' many a time in Win chester befo' the war. I'm Steve Bray ton." "Fo'deLawd! Yes, I 'member yor voice! I dun reckoned yo was some mo of dat crowd what was gwine ter kill me!" "Hev yo met up with anybody?" "JPe Lawd furgive me, bat I has! Back dar 'boat two miles a gang o' white men stopped me an war gwine to sbnte me dead an cut my froat! Dey said I had sawn some Yankee spies, an . bekase I dun hadn't seen nobody 'tall - dey giv nrede moas' powerful lickin on airth!" "Yankee spies ?" queried Steve. "Ah, I understand! And are yo' with the 'Percy fam'ly, Uncle Ben?" - "Fur shore." ' "Do they una live nigh yere?" " 'Bont a mile away, sah." "And whar war yo' goin when yo met np with that crowd?" "I'd dun started fur Harrisonburg to git news 'bout dat big battle. Dat Cap'an Wyle he was long yere today an told Miss Sunshine dat Mars Kenton waB killed ober dar!" . 'He did?" 'V" Yes, sab, an den Miss Sunshine com ont to me wid her face as white as snow an tears in her eyes an a big lump in her froat, an when I seed how powerful she felt I dun said I would go an find out dat Mars Kenton was all right." "See yere, Uncle Ben, I've got sun thin to tell yo'!" said Brayton as he drew him out of the road. "Mars Ken ton . is np yere among the rocks and bresh!" "Fo de Lawd!" ."That gang was after the two of ns, though we are not Yankee spies. Mars Kenton was badly wonnded jest befo' dark, and I had to cairy he nn on my back fur a couple of miles. Uncle Ben, yo' must go to the house and git blan kets and bandages and snnthin fnr us to eat. Yo' must also bring that gal yere, but not tonight. Tomorrer will do tur her, but we must bev the other things tonight." . "Fnr de lav of heaben, bnt how yo go talk!" gasped the old man. "Pen Mara Kenton he wasn't killed- at Har risonbnrg?" "No." ...... , - "And he dun got shot tryin to git ober yere today?" "Yes. Is Ike Baxter's wife at the house?" "Her am, an she dun jest hates Mars Kenton." "Then yo' mast be keerful. Try and see the gal alone. Tell bet she mast send the things tonight, bat not to come herself till tomorrer. Go now as fast as yo' kin. I'll be waitin fur yo' right yere on this spot. Hold on a minit. Hev yo got a gtm at the house?" . . "Yes, a double bar'l'd shotgun." "Then bring it back with yo', and powder and shot and caps. If we hev a font yere, it will be at clus range,' and buckshot will be better 'n bullets." "Fo' de Lawd!" muttered the old man as he setQff at bis best pace. "Dat Cap'an Wyle he lie to Miss- Sunshine. Den Miss Sunshine wants me to go to Harrisonburg. Den I meet np wid some gorillas an git switched till I smart like pepper. Den I start fur home an meet dat Steve Brayton an find out dat Mars Kenton hain't dead bnt hurted, an de Lawd only knows what's gwine to hap pen tomorrer!" - . .- The invalid mother had fallen into a light sleep, and Marian sat thinking. She and Mrs. Baxter had taken turns at watching with the sick, and thjs was her night, while the other had- gone to the help's quarters. Uncle Ben need not have been cautioned about Mrs. Bax ter, as he felt that he thoroughly under stood her disposition. He turned off the road to approach the house from another direction, and so softly did he draw near that the first warning Marian had of his presence was a tapping on the ir i ; u i,, i. niuuun yauci jicwou uja viu umm The first warning Marian had ofhis.pres ence was a tapping on the window. face against the glass that she might know who was there, and a moment later she stood outside the door with a shawl thrown over her head. "You are back, Uncle Ben what's the matter?" she asked. "Heaps de mattab, Miss Sunshine, heaps. I dun met np wid mo' dan fo'ty bushels o' trubble! I'ze news fur yo' !" "Yon yoti met some one who told yon about Mr. Kenton?" "Far shore! Dat Cap'an Wyle lie to yo'! Mars Kenton he dun git away arter dat battle, 'long wid Steve Bray ton." "Thank God!" she whispered as she rafsed her clasped hands to the bright stars in the winter sky. "But dar's trubble, Miss Sunshine heaps o' trubble! Dey was tryin to git ober yere when some gorillas reckoned dey was Yankee spies an dun shotted Mars Kenton. He hain't dead, bnt he's bad hart, an he's lyin in the bresh an rocks down yere 'bont a mile. I met dat Steve Brayton, an he dun tole me all 'bout it." "Royal Kenton wonnded badly hnrt and lying in the brush this winter's night !"'moaned Marian as she grasped Uncle Ben by the arm. "Hist dar!" he cautioned. "We mustn't woke up de missus or dat Bax ter woman. Now, den, yo' be brave. Yo's got to be! Steve Brayton he dun said I was to bring back blankets an bandages an snnthin to eat. We cjust step aronnd mighty softly an pick 'em np!" "And I will go back with yon! God grant that his life may be spared!" "Hush, chile! Yo' can't go wid me tonight, but tomorrer. Dat's what Steve Brayton dun' said. When I git back dar, I'll see Mars Kenton wid my own eyes, an I'll tell him all 'bout yo. an I'Jl stay right dar all night an nuss him." ...... "Oh, Uncle Ben, but I feel that I mast go to him" "Hush! Yo' jess git all dem fings what I spoke of packed up fur me as quick as yo' kin an let me go back! " If yo' want dem gorillas to finish Mars Kenton, yo' jest make a fnss so dat Mrs. Baxter will open dem big ears o' hern an find out de news!" CHAPTER XXni. '-. As was stated in a previous chapter, Captain Wyle's company, along with others, had been returned to the valley and placed nnder the orders of General Imboden. Ike Baxter and. the others captured at Kernstown had rejoined ti j company when exchanged. Ike felt more than ever that Royal Kenton was an enemy he must get rid of, and Cap tain Wyle encouraged this feeling in various ways, though never openly and directly committing himself. On two occasions Ike had been granted leave of absence to visit his wife. Both times he had met her secretly. The spirit which animated this hum ble twain will surprise only those who have never encountered the "poor whites" of the south. Nine out of ten of the bloody and long continued feuds we read of in southern communities begin among the poor' and ignorant. The cause is generally of trifling char acter. The "poor white" may be hum bled, by the law, but ontside of the courtroom he bates with an intensity hard to realize. He is persistent, can ning, merciless. Ike Baxter bad -never had an ambition in his life up to the honr he enlisted. He could barely read and write, was naturally lazy and in different and felt no pride in anything except the fact that he was " better than a nigger." When be found -that cor porals and sergeants were looked np to and respected, there came a queer feel ing in his heart. He could not credit it at first, but Captain Wyle aided him in his mental struggle. The day came when Ike had an ambition and a burn ing desire. It was. to be a corporal or sergeant. In his wild dreams of glory he did not stop there. He determined to go higher and become a lientenant or captain. As soon as he was giveu to understand that Royal Kenton stood in his way it was bnt natural with one of his nature to determine to remove the obstacle by any means possible. Before the war the "Yankee, both as a man and as the representative of a section of the republic, had few friends in the sooth. He was supposed to be hostile to ell southern-"institutions." The more ignorant the southerner the more heartily he hated and' despised the citizen of the north. He believed what the fire eating politicians pretended to believe and often' asserted. - The John Brown raid npon slavery in Virginia and the events in "Bleeding Kansas" served to intensify the sectional hate or the "poor whites." Thns it was that Ike Baxter, picking np his crumbs of history and his bits of information oq cnrrent events at the docs of the livery stable or aronnd the stove of the bar room, was' something of a local cham pion in the matter of Yankee hating. If Kenton bad not stood between him and military glory, he would still have felt a bitterness toward him as a man born in the north. . Uncle Ben's cautions ap proach to the house on this night had reference only to Mrs. Baxter. There was another man stealing throngh the darkness and making a noiseless ap proach at the same time Ike Baxter, Neither Uncle Ben nor Marian Percy caught a sight of .him, but he noticed their every movement and drew his own conclusions. The gun which the old man had been told to secure was in his room in the little house. He had de parted from Rest Haven without being seen or his absence noted by the wom an, but bis return aroused her, and her sharp eyes were upon him as he carried away the firearm and loaded himself with the bundles Marian had prepared and brought to the door. She was dress ing to follow him as he disappeared down the highway, having a dim sus picion of the state of affairs, when Ike knocked at her window and was admit ted. In les3 than-a minute be had re lated what he saw outside, and she had told him of Uncle Ben taking the gun. " "Whar's he nn bound fur?" queried Ike. "Dunno, but snnthin 's happened sum wear ! Yo' must foller him!" "Has that Yankee bin yere?" "No, but the gal's hearn news, fnr shore ! Reckon he nn may be lyin out j f r.nnd BW.T: ?b? gge5'8 takin out stuff to him! Git right arter ght he un, Ike, and if yo' find the Yankee go'n tell Captain Wyle and, bev him cum with his critter company!" "I'll do better'n that!" grimly re plied the man as he stepped ont into the night. "It I find that Yankee aronnd yere, I'll put a bullet into him fust and tell Captain Wyle next!" Uncle Ben had only a few bnndred yards the start, and . the man on his trail sopn lessened the distance until he could hear the old man's footsteps and make out a shadowy form through the darkness. There seemed nothing more certain than that be would follow on and uncover the hiding place of the "fu gitives. For nearly three-quarters of a mile the slave messenger had. bnt one idea to return to Steve Brayton as fast as possible. ' He was hurrying along when a sudden thought flashed through his brain, and he instinctively stepped aside and halted to listen. "How do I. know but what dat wom an dun heard me git de gun an is fol lerin me?" he whispered to himself. "She'd do it! She's powerful wicked, she am! An mebbe some mo' of dem gorillas am waitin long yere to grab me an giv me anodder whippin!" He was listening as well as whisper ing, and after a. minute he heard the sounds of footsteps coming down the road. He drew back into the deeper shadow of the high bank, dropped his bundles, and taking a firm grip of his gun he mentally resolved to make a fight for it if he was overhanled by the same crowd as before. A few seconds later he realized that only one person was approaching. The footfalls were too heavy for a woman. He had just aeciaed this point when a man loomed up in the darkness before him and halt ed almost within arm's length to mat ter: , "Drat my hide, bnt has that ole nig ger left the road an giv me the slip? I heard he nn only a minit ago, bnt him's dun gone now!" It was Ike Baxter of course. He stood peering and listening for half a minute and then growled: "I orter hev run he nn right down an made him show me the way!. Now the cussed Yankee may git away from me! No, he won't thongb! I'll hunt over every foot of this country but what I'll find him an hev his scalp!" Uncle Ben did not recognize the man at all, as it had been many months since he had heard Ike Baxter's voice. It was instantly plain to him. however, that the man was a determined enemy and was seeking Royal Kenton's life. Ike took three or four steps forward and stopped again - to listen. Noiselessly and with such a feeling as he had never experienced before Uncle Ben clubbed his gun, took one silent step forward Uncle Ben clubbed his gun. and next instant brought the heavy stock down npon Ike's head and felled him to the earth. The man sank down without a cry or groan, and after wait ing half a minute the old man gasped out: , "May de good Lawd dun furgive me, bnt I had to do it fur Miss Sunshine's sake!" - (To he Continued.) Electric Power in Africa. Attention was recently called in this column to the proposed use of the cat aracts of the Nile for the generation of electric power. A a meeting of the Institution of Civil Engineers in Lon don a short time ago. Prof. Forbes re ported that he had. been consulted about another similar enterprise in the "dark continent." This was a propo sition to employ the Victoria Falls of the .Zambesi river In supplying electric power to the gold mines in Matabele land and the Transvaal. He thought the scheme was not so chimerical as it had at first appeared to him. In his opinion "the distance over which power might be profitably transmitted by elec tricity was not far short of 1,000 miles." Specimens of a strange caterpillar discovered this spring on pear trees in Cambridge, Mass., are pronounced by Prof. Samuel Henshaw to be the "gold tail.' or euproctis chrysorrhea, hitherto nnknown as an Inhabitant of this country, although It is found in En gland, and is "abundant in Central and Southern Europe." When numer ous, these caterpillars are very de structive, feeding on such trees and plants as the apple, pear, plum, haw thorn, bramble, elm, willow, beech, oak, hazelnut and hornbeam. At pres ent the invaders in Massachusetts are said to te confined to a limited area in Somerville and Cambridge. The first specimens seem to have made, their appearance a year ago, and thus far they have Confined themselves to pear and apple trees. How they got across the ocean nobody apparently knows. It is suggested that by vigorous measures they may be stamped out i20go-0 Schilling's Best baking powder goes a third farther than any other ; gets to work quicker; makes sweeter cake. " Schilling s Best tea makes good cake taste better. Schilling's Best baking powder and tea art What is the missing word? not SAFE, although Schilling's Best baking powder and tea are safe. Get Schilling's Best baking powder or tea at your grocers'; take out the ticket (brown ticket in every package of baking powder; yellow ticket in the tea); send a ticket with each word to address below before December 31st. Until October 15th two words allowed for every ticket ; after that only one word for every ticket. If only one person finds the word, that person gets J2000.00 ;' if several find it, $ 2000.00 will be equally divided among them. . Every one sending a brown or yellow ticket will receive a set of cardboard creeping babies at the end of the contest. Those sending three or more in one envelope will receive an 1S9S pocket calendar no advertising on it. These creeping babies and pocket calendars will be different from the ones offered in the last contest. f Better cut these Address: MONEY-BACK, SAN FRANCISCO. Tourist Traffic in Ireland. Ireland is now being opened more than ever for visitors. Its attractions are being more prominently placed be fore tourists, and increased facilities have been provided for viewing its many natural beauties. The presence of royalty cannot fail to give a stimn lus to tourist traffic. Professor William Crookes, of Lon don, is authority for the assertion that to count the omlecnles in a pin-heau space at the rate of 10,000,000 per sec ond would require 150,000 years. The government will furnish Grand Army committees with marble head stones for the unmarked graves of sol diers of the-evolution, the war of 1812 and of Mexican war veterans. The present cent is composed of ninety-five parts of copper, four of tin and one of zinc MISERY APPLES PEARS PEACHES PLUMS Prunes &c. Send ns names for Free Catalogue. Buell Lamberson, Portland, Oregon. STOCK FARMER5 Tm; 0 Tut MACHINE to Pir You cop in W.TM Th h Fall FMT1RE.w CLARK'S RIGHT-LAP Plow and Seeder Combined. Thoroughly works the Soil to a depth of 5 to omcnes. -Leaves no Plow Crust. - Places the seed 3 to 4 inches down, thoroughly covereu witn ligni, loose soil. Every farmer that has used it KECOM- Mfc.NDS it. FIRST AND TAYLOR STS., PORTLAND, OR. General Agents for Oregon, ton and Idaho. Washing VIGOR MM Easily, Quickly, Permanently Restored Weakness, Nervousness, Debility, ana au tne train of evilt from early errors or later excesses ; the results of overwork. Sickntmn. wnr- . ry, etc Full strength. 1 development and tone I given to every orira.n land portion of the body. I Simple, natural methods. Immediate imnmvmnf. seen. Failure impossible. 2,000 references. Bonk. explanation and proofs mailed (sealed) free. ERIE MEDICAL COu'SSMaWS. AGENTS we want an a?ent in each village and citv. also to work the country homes, selling our Holiday books suitable lor children, only one person in each place will be appointeil, e"ither lady or mission. Reliable house. Write today. Address, PUBLISHER, 30O Post Street, San Francisco, Cal. DO YOU WANT SEEDS Get them at'E. J. BOWIS'S, 201 and 203 Front street, Portland, Or. ' Also agent for the Celebrated Clipper Mill; best farming mill in tne worm. jivery larmer should have one. Write for prices. Dentists.... - Get your supplies of us at cut rates. Large stock and low prices. Goods guaranteed. Wdari-Clarle 4 Co,, Dental Depot, Portland. A NERVOUS i Debility sufferer in an aggravated form snows it on his face a haggard worn-looking man. The same with women. But what of the man who has lost all vital and manly power, and yet looks like a physical giant? That is i ust the question to which Dr. Sanden has devoted twenty years of study. It is true that men who look strong ARE weak in this respect, Dr. Sanden has found the cause and explains it in his little work, "Three Classes of Men," Which he sends free by mail sealed from observation, or can be had at his office. It gives full, intormation relating to Dr. Sanden' s Electric Belt. It might be worth your time to read the little book. Get it, or call and see this wonderful Belt. , SANDEN ELECTRIC BELT CO. 853 TV est Washington St., Portland, Cbj. Please mention this Paper it o4 6rrspTanas Good. TJH I - - h "fr ..a VMM r I-! .because they are money -back. rules out. 2051 Poor French Gunnery. The gunners of the French navy are not to be congratulated on their marks manship if the results of the target practice of three of the larger war ves sels at Toulon are to be taken as a cri terion. The guns of the three vessels blazed away at the old wooden dispatch-boat Petrel, utilized as the tar get, which was set about 4,000 yards (two miles) away, until 300 charges were expended, enough to have sunk a whole squadron of such vessels. The Petrel is still afloat. This is some thing like the target practice of the flagship Pensacola, the frigate Iroquois and the training ship Jamestown in San Francisco bay at the centennial cele bration of 1876, when at a range of one mile they fired for over an hour at an old scow -anchored in the stream off the Presidio, which was rigged as a monitor and filled with combustibles, without hitting it once. It was planned to drop a shell into it that would fire it and blow it np, but the defective, gun nery of the fleet and of Fort Point, which joined in the bombardment, made it necessary to send out a boat to it and apply the torch to it by hand. The excuse at the time for the poor markmanship was that the ammuni tion used was old and worthless, being a part of the surplus on hand at the close of the war. . ' ilOO REWARD, 9100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dis ease, requires aconstitational treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the sys tem, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its eurative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials, Address, F. J. CHJSNEY, & Co., Toledo, O. Bold bv druggists, 7oc. Hall's Family Fills are the best. Dr. Max Schlier, of Berlin, has dem onstrated that by the use of Roentgen rays one can see how sounds are pro duced by the voice in singing. HOME PRODUCTS AND PUKE FOOD. All, Eastern Syrup, so-called, usually verv light colored and of heavy body, is made f rou glucose. "Tea Garden Drips" is made from Sugar Cane and is strictly pure. It is for sale by first-class grocers, in cans only." Manufac tured by the Pacific Coast Syrup Co. All gen uine "Tea Garden Drips" have the manufac turer's name lithographed on every can. A boy who reecntlydied at the age of 13, in Indiana, from excessive smok ing, bad consumed in the past five years 50,000 cigarettes. I know that my life was saved by-Piso's Cure for Consumption. John A. Miller, Au Sable, Michigan, April 21, 1895. The value of house property of Lon don is $3,365,000,000; that of Paris, $1,430,000,000; that of New York, $1, 355,000,000. - Try Schilling's Best tea and baking p6wder. Employ None But Women. Women have displaced men in every branch of the machine shops of a bi cycle manufacturing firm having a large plant at Toledo, O. In this establish ment girls are now employed on .mill ing machines, drill presses and other machines used in the manufacture of bicycle parts. The substitution of girls for men has certainly not been prompt ed by a desire on the part of the com pany to assist in the great purpose of making the female portion of the popu lation self-sustaining, but rather to se cure cheaper labor than their copmeti tors. Another Use for the Ray. In France, by means of the Roentgen rays, the sex of the silkworms is now determined while they are in the co coon. This deterimnation has in the past been carired on uncertainly. usually by weight, the female cocoons nsuajly being slightly heavier. Moat Populous Nations. The revised returns of the Russian census give the total population of that ; country as 139,000,000. This makes Russia third in rank among nations, China coming first with an estimated population of . 400,000,000, and the British Empire next with 298,000,000. Slain and Foreign Trade. The capital of Siam has a consider able foreign trade. During 1895 the number of vessels that entered the har bor of Bangkok was 518, and the im ports were valued at $20,000,000. The X rays are to ue used in settling whether the old masters in New York are genuine paintings or not. If traces of a signature be found under the one now jn evidence, it will be proof enough that the painting has been tampered with. A ton of Atlantic water when evapor ated yields eighty-one pounds of salt; a ton of Pacific water, seventy-nine pounds; the water in the Dead Sea, more than twice as much 187 pounds to the ton. The Roman sworJs, before Cannae, B. C. 236, were pointless and sharp only on one side; after Cannae the short Spanish sword, for cutting and thrusting, was adapted. - The longest continued cataleptic sleep known to science was reported from Germany in 1892, the patient having remained absolutely unconscious for four and a half months. - There are no courts in the Klondike region, but perhaps they are not neces sary where everyone observes the golden, rale. ;.r . . Bow She Cured Him. . "I thought I was going to sell a cof- nn to one or my neignoors a few days ago, said the undertaker. "A certain young man who had " -n dissipating considerably of late, and had got into debt, became desperate and threatened on, several occasions to commit suicide If his widowed mother did not give him some of the money she had bor - rowed on their little home. Not long ago he went, home with a desperate look on his face, and, calling his moth er into the drawing room, said, as he pulled a revolver from his hip pocket: 'I will have the mnnpv. or 1 will pnrt my miserable existence.' 'Wait! Wait!' screamed his mother, as she rushed from the room. A look of satisfaction overspread the young man's face as he mumbled tn himself .nt 1 would get it. In a moment his mother returned carrying a large rug. Quietly she spread it down on the carpet, and then, straightening up, said: 'Now, George, go ahead. I was afraid you would spoil my carpet with blood stains. Any choice about coffins? The young man almost sank to the floor In his astonishment and disappointment. He was sure if he threatened to shoot himself his mother would accede to his unjust demands and give him the little money she was saving to buy the neces saries of life with, but on the day before she had come over to my house and told my wife about his threats. My wife put the iuea into her head to chaff her son the next time he threatened to com mit suicide. She was afraid to try, but, summoning all her nerve, she carried out instructions, and succeeded. The young man hasn't said a word about dying since." New Orleans Times Democrat Elephants. Some elephants are said to be good climbers. They make their way up and down mountains and through a country of steep cliffs, where mules would not dare to venture, . and even where men find passage difficult. Their tracks have been found upon the very summit of mountains over seven thou sand feet high. In these journeys an elephant Is often compelled to descend hills and mountain sides which are al most precipitous. This is the way in which It Is done. The elephant's first manoeuvre is to kneel down close to the declivity. One foreleg is then cau tiously passed over the edge and a short way down the slope, and if he finds there is no good spot for a firm foothold, he speedily forms one by stamping into the soil if It is moist, or kicking out a footing if it is dry. If the elephant is now sure of a good foot hold, the other foreleg is brought down In the same way. Then he performs the same work over again with his feet, bringing both forelegs a little in advance of the-first foothold. This leaves good places already made for the hind feet. Now, bracing himself up by his huge, strong forelegs, he draws his hind legs, first one and then the other, carefully over the edge; where they oc cupy the first places made by the fore feet. This is the way the huge animal proceeds all the way down, zigzag, kneeling every time with the two hind legs whilShe makes footholes with his forefeet. Thus the center of gravity is preserved, and the huge beast pre vented from toppling over on his nose. : Rarity of Congenital Teeth. " The fact that congenital, teeth are so rarely met with is one of the most inter esting in physiology. It is recorded that out of 17,578 new-born infants at the Paris Maternity, in ten consecutive years, only three had teeth, or not much more than one In 6,000. Out of 500 cases collected by Magitat, In which the time of eruption of the first tooth was noted, in only one were there teeth at birth. After a close study of cases of this sort by Dr. Ballantyne of Edin burgh, the presence of such teeth, he remarks, 4s likely to have an ill effect upon lactation, partly on account of the Imperfect closure of the Infant's mouth, and partly by the wounding of the mother's nipple; they have probably little or no prognostic significance as regards the bodily or mental vigor of the infant carrying them, and, as usu ally met with, are lower incisors, though sometimes upper incisors are seen, but very rarely molars of either the upper or lower jaw. Such teeth are caused by the premature occurrence of the processes which normally - lead to the cutting of milk teeth; and,, as they are usually incomplete and ill develop ed, and likely to be more of an incon venience than advantage to the Infant, they are best removed soon after birth. Pox a Queer Character. Henry Stephen Fox, one of the earli est English ministers at Washington, was so eccentric as to i-ake himself the laughing stock of the whole town. He generally did not arise until other people were almost ready to go to bed. When duty compelled him to rise earli er, he was, like an cwl i- the daytime. "How strange," said he tc Mme. Cald ron, one morning at a state "function" "how strange we look to each oth er by daylight." His debts compelled him to economy, and he rarely gave dinners. He once invited a large par ty to his house Mr. Clay, Mr. Calhoun, Mr. Webster and all the giants and when they were all assembled, he said: "Gentlemen, now be good enough to put on your hats and follow me." And then he led them to a neighboring eat ing house. Ohio State Journal. Curing the Hen, Editor Terry, of the Minden Herald, wants to know how to keep his neigh bors' hens out of his garden. Well, Charley, take a lot of small, stiff cards about 1 by 2 inches, write on them, "Please keep your darned old hens at home,'; tie a short string to each card with a grain of corn at the other end of the string and scatter these where the hens congregate. When the hungrj biddy gobbles up the grain that draws the prize, she follows np the string, stowing it away until she comes to the card, then you will see her pull out for home, carrying In her mouth your po lite request. Try It, brother, and let us know how it works. Brown City (Mich.) Standard. Blind Statistics. It is estimated that there are 1,000, flOO blind people In the world, or one to every 1,500 inhabitants, says an ex change. Latest reports ,8 how. 23,000 blind persons in England, or 870 for sach million inhabitants. Blind infants of less than five years, 100 for each bill ion: between five and fifteen, 288: be tween twenty and twenty-five, 422; be tween forty-five and sixty, 1,625, and above sixty-five years, 7,000 for each million. Russia and Egypt are the countries where the blind constitute the largest proportionate number of total population. Another Thing. Wife Ton. saw Mrs. Browser last evening? Husband Yes, but not to speak to her. " Wife What a story! I ; heard yon were sitting with ber for more than two hours. . ' . . ; : Husband That's so; bnt it was she t-v . t-- talking. Up-to-Dat. r - Inroada of German Trad. France imported $6,000,000 worth of 1. jewelry from Germany last year. This fact has caused Consternation among the laree jewelrv manufacturers in the i ; '. ' 1 former country. The German articles are nearly all of a cheap variety, and a large proportion of the jewels which they contain are imitation. It is rath er striking to see the Germans cutting into a branch of trade in which the French have always been easily first. French exports of jewelry and watches continue to be very important. In the Far East China and India the French have almost entire control of the watch and jewelry trade. i I I j THE BLUES. This is a synonym for that gloomy, harrassed condition of the mind which has its origin in dyspepsia. All the uelv sDirits that, under the i name of the "blues," "blue devils," megrims" ana-muuigru Ds'torments tne dyspeptic almost ceaselessly, vanish when attacked with Hos tetierjs. Stomach Bitters, that, moreover, anni hilates biliousness, constipation, chilis and fever, kidney complaints, and nervousness. An American scientist has recently discovered a new microbe which is par ticularly destructive to the tissues of the human body, and the most striking peculiarity of the creature is that it is nearly all mouth. A magnetic well of great power has been struck at Bowersville, five miles south of Jamestown, Ohio. Tha well was drilled 140 feet deep, and at this depth the drill became so magnetized that particles of iron clung to it. The Gauls, to make handles for their stone axes, cleft the branch of a tree, placed the stone in it and left it till the wound in the wood had been com pletely healed. AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD " C ASTORIA " AND PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS OUR TrTde 'mark. I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that has borne and does now on every vcu,r uica j iHs-svmite signature of lhbs is the original usea, in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is tne Icind you have always bought " and has the aisSnatu.ra TTf Ccay A&-jj? -, - " j - ' - - ' " wrap per. JVo one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is jrresiaent. March 8, 1897. Do Not Be Do not endanger the life nf vnnr which some ..". - J " n finnr nmcroricf mow .fT- -.-bb,, jUU n;, me ingredients ol which "The Kind You Have Always Bought' BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OP Insist on Having Kind That Never Failed The THK CCNTkUN COMMNV, TT A perfect type of the highest order of excellence In mannfactnre." Walter BREAKFAST COCOA Be sure that yon get th genuine article, made at Jk Established 3 '78o. WALTER S. Silverfield, American Type Founders Company Cor. JL Hercules Special (2 actual horsepower) Price, on(y $185. DIETING, WASH- lng tne stomacn, peps n ; you may have tried all these remedies and onlv found relief from Indiges tion, Catarrh of the Stomach. In trying Y8 PEPTICKRO you will find a CUKE. Price, 1. On receipt of same will deliver it to your nearest express office free of charge. Agent, ....FRANK NAU.... Portland Hotel Pharmacy, Sixth and Morrison street. PORTLAND, OR. BASE BULL EOODS'8' Wt carry the most complete line of Gymnasium and Athletic Goods n the Coast. SUITS AND UNIFORMS M A0C TO ORDER. Send tor Our Athletic Catalogue. WILL FINCK CO., OlS-sao Market St., Smm madH. Cal. r A MOTHER'S BOUT. . ' Your daughters are the most pre cious legacy possible in this life. The responsibility for them and their future is largely with you. The mysterious change that develops the thoughtful woman from the thoughtless girl, should find you on the watch day and night. -' As yon care for their physical well being, so will the woman be, and so will her child ren be also. Lydia E. Pinkham's " Vegetable Compound " is the sure reliance in this hour of trial- Thousands have found it the never-failing power to correct all irregularities and start the woman on the sea of life with that physical health all should have. Womb difficulties, displacements and the horrors cannot exist in company with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. r "T ' C H I L D R E E E T H iVcT Ml WlNHIilV'ft RnATRTVa Hvtim uhnnM . wan Ka I used for children teething. It soothes the child, soft- 4 m van tne gums, auays an pain, cures win a colic, &na is nd if ) ww oess remedy tor aiarrnce. Twenty arm cenx It In the best of all. - - m r- i . w wm.TtTtp.i. rmr niuntH'O UAo I UKIA. Which has hpj.r,. on the Deceived. rbiM k ,.n: i . v "-J'g a. laicay SUOSUlUie u i , - uccause ne manes a lew more pennies even he does not know. You. MURRAY TKtT, NEW TO UK CITV. Baker & Co.'s Absolutely Pure Delicious Nutritious. Costs Less than One Cent a Cup. DORCHESTER, MASS. ....By.... BAKER & CO. Ltd. BUY YOUR FUR GARMENTS Direct from the manufacturer and save middleman's profit, as we undersell them all. Our garments are custom made aud not like those thrown together in New York sweat-shops, where filth and disease reign. Our garments are guaranteed as to durabil ity and style. Our prices on iur Capes range from S8 upwards; on Fur Collarettes, from 5 upwards; Neck Boas, from 76c up wards; genuine Alaska Sealskin Garments made from V150 up wards. Write for information and catalogue. Leading Far Manufacturer, 143 Third St., Portland Or. EVERYTHING FOR THE PRINTER.... We lead and originate fashions in.... TYPE Second' and Stark Sts. PORTLAND, OREGON 1DOWER ...FOR. PROFIT Power that will save you money and make you mosey. Hercules Engines are the cheapest power known. Burn Gasoline or Distillate Oil; no smoke, fire, or dirt For pumping, running dairy or farm machinery, they have no equaL Automatic in action, perfectly safe and reliable. Send for illustrated catalog. Hercules Gas Engine Works Bay St, San Francisco, Cal. Portland, Oregon A. T. Akjotkoko, it.., Prin. j. A. Wksco, Sec'y THC BUSY WORLD OF BUSINESS . gins prasM aaploTBnt to kindred of oar (rassmlM, u4 will to tkoiuaadi Bor. Boa fcr oar ntotofM. V"mwht D4hw wto.h. TerUf, A aUSINCSS EDUCATION PAYS . SUPTCRK and pmt enred; no pav nn til cored: send for book. 1bs. Manspiil OBTXanaxs, S3t Market St., Sam Francisco. H. P. N. V. NO. 41, '91. WHKK writing aaeatioa this n aTtira, BlOM "raw