fliscellany. THE GARRET CLATTER. I don't hear the young folks patter Like they used to long ago Up the stairs to raise a clatter Underneath the rafters low. What's the reason things is stiller- Since the young folks went away John an' Joe an' 6weet Perjniller? Looks as if they'd gone to stay. Wife, there hain't no sunshine gushin' In the way it used to come; 'T only seems as if the pushin' Shaders was a-comin' hum. Sorter quietlike an' dreary, Only us two here alone; ,Jist the days seem draggin' weary - Like a long an' dismal moan. In the garret things is quiet; Mice an' spiders has their way jg Where the youngsters used to riot In their childish pranks an' play. Sweet Permiller used to tag 'em, Joe an' John in comers dark, An' the maiden used to fag 'em, Tire 'em out an' raise a lark. .When the bumblebees was droonin' An' the flowers was in bloom, An' the lilac bush was groanin' With the scent of its perfume, Then the young folks used to patter Up the stairs a-long ago Up the stairs to raise a clatter Underneath the rafters low. Seems to me I'm sometimes dreamia' Of the things that used to be, Till the old life comes a-streamin' Back ag'in to you an' me. Then I hear the young folks patter Up the stairs they used to go There to raise a garret clatter Underneath the rafters low. Waverley Magazine. IRENE. HOPS and offices were pouring their streams of life in to the crowded streets. It was C o'clock at evening. At a corner where a human tide swept like a tor rent from a broken dam a woman stood under a lamp post. She was tall and dark, and bo motionless that she might have been a statue. Her arms were folded under her cloak. A policeman, edging his way through the crowd, asked her a ques tion. She shook her head slowly, and did not look at him. The policeman passed on, and the next moment there were two quick pistol shots, a scream, and a stampede. The officer ran back, fighting his way through the swirling crowd. He found the woman, pistol in hand, bending over a man lying upon the pavement. The officer seized her wrist, and, looking at him with a etrange smile, as she relaxed her hold ' on the pistol, she said: "I am a woman, and I demand to be treated as such." When she had been taken to the sta tion and asked to make a statement, she said: "My name is Irene Roma. The name of the man I shot is Roy Campbell. I shot him because he ought to be killed. He was engaged to marry my sister. He did not keep faith with her, and she died of a broken heart. ttp g a brute, and ought to be dead." "Campbell, was taken to a hospital. His wounds were pronounced danger ous. An effort was made to Interview him. But all he would say was: "I suppose she thought she had a right to shoot me." He asked if they had put her in jail, and appeared to be. pleased when told that she had been allowed out on bail. Three weeks later the wounded man was sitting propped up in bed, when a card bearing the name of Irene Roma was handed to him. He looked hard at It, rubbed his eyes, held it further away, then closer, and then remarked: "I don't understand why she should want to see me. Let her come in." With a timid, awe-struck air the wom an approached the bed. She coughed in embarrassment as she seated herself on a chair which the nurse placed for her. She put back her hair, made aim less motions in her confusion, and then, looking straight at Campbell, said: "I am awfully sorry I shot you." Campbell smiled. "And are you sure you harven't come to shoot me again?" he asked. She frowned in reproof. "You know I haven't. If you had thought that you would have told them to keep me out." "No, I wouldn't. You have come so far out here that I couldn't have found the heart to disappoint you." "A plaster of sarcasm won't draw out a soreness, Mr. Campbell. I have suf fered so with remorse that I have come to see if I could not find some sort of consolation. You don't know how I have suffered. And I must go through a hateful trial, too, with everybody looking at me. Oh, I do wish I hadn't shot yoa!" "Yes," he drawled, "I rather wish so myself. So, you see, we have some thing in common. But you needn't be worried over the trial. I shall not ap pear against you." The nurse had withdrawn. They were alone. She put back her hair again, and he followed the movement of her graceful hand the hand that had shot him. "No, I will not appear," he went on. "It is something of a distinc tion to be shot by the handsomest wom an in Liverpool." He hesitated as he saw the tears gathering in her eyes. "I take it all back," he said. She wiped her eyes, and sat looking far away through a window. The mystery that lies In the cloudland was reflected in her eyes, and he gazed at her. She turn ed her eyes upon him, and the mystery flew from them. "Yes, I am sorry I shot you," she said; "but I bate you, and never can forgive you." "Ah! and I am therefore consoled by the thought that you never can forgive me.". "Brute!" she said. "I almost wish I had killed you." "When a woman almost wishes a thing, she wishes it doubly," he replied. "I don't know but there Is some truth Jn that," she assented. "But what a beast you were to treat Florence so. How-could you?" "Because I was a beast, I suppose." "Yes, roti were. She was taken ill with fever shortly afterward, but it was broken heart that Killed ner. tier eyes shot shafts of hatred at him. "But I didn't come to reproach you," she said. ' "Then why did you come?" he aeked. "To ask yon why you could have been bo heartless. T s'mply want to know. Was it because you have no heart at all ?' "It was because I had too much heart." She darted a fierce look at h'tu. "Ah! It W8S because you loved another woni O." wXes. Florence made rae promise to tell her If If I should love any oik bet ter than I did her. It was not my fault if another woman set my soul afire, when Florence had only warmed my heart. God knows I fought against it with all my strength, all my philosophy. But at last I had to tell her, and I left it with her whether or not I should keep my promise of marriage. Then she drove me from her presence." "Ah! And then you went to the other woman and told her of your love, and she spurned you." "Xo, I did not tell her. Indeed. I was determined tnat she should not know." lrwil.-nrl nt liim spnrehiuelY. "You killer! mv sister but vou are more or a Klliea my sisttr, uui juu man than I thought. He smiled sadly. "A man is always more or less of a man than a woman thinks." "If you hold so poor an opinion of women, I don't see how you cgu'd love one." "I don't see. either." "Fool!" she said. "Yes; I'm a man." She smiled at him, and then after a si lence she said: "Do you intend to tell the woman ol your love?" "No." "If you do, and she loves you, I wili shoot you again." "That's consoling." "Then let it console you. But really I am sorry for you for your weakness. You ought to have had more strength than to let that other woman and I know she is a fright win your love. You ought to have known that she was playing with you." "Reason addresses the brain, but it cannot reach the heart. I told you that I fought " "Yes, I know." And after a long si lence she said: "I wish you would tell me the name of that woman." "Irene Roma." She sprang to her feet with a cry, and a nurse ran into the room. She tounci j the visitor on her knees by the bed-1 side. "Leave us," the man said, and the nurse withdrew. He put his hand on her head, and she sobbed under his j touch. "And that was the reason I could not keep faith with her," he said. "Yon set my soul on fire, and in the flames I could see your smile." She had caught his hand, and it was wet with her tears. "And for that love I was l willing to die," he said, unable now to see her, kneeling beside him, but feel ing the warm tears upon his hand. "O, don't don't say that!" she sob- bed. "In my despair I hated you be- i cause I loved you so." Princess. GAME AS A LUXURY. Americans Learning that It Has Ad vantages Over Other Meuts. In the appreciation of game we have j been more tardy, perhops, than in oth er directions," writes Ella Morris Kretschmar in the Woman's Home Companion. "The mechanic, day-laborer, the humblest and poorest, in nearly all parts of our land, have ever had at their command a ducal feast. Our very riches have made us indiffer entinfluenced somewhat by the fact that on all the frontiers, and in 'early times,' in each State game has been of necessity the chief food. It has never, therefore, been a luxury. But traveled Americans, having come to share In the estimate put upon wild meats by the epicures of the world, have so in cited good livers at home that game is at a premium in our city markets; and in rural districts appreciation grows as the supply 'lessens. "An important point not to be for gotten is that game has the added ad vantage of being the food for jaded ap petites and weakened stomachs. While fully as nourishing, it is more easily digested than other meats. "In the cooking of game a few essen tial points must ever be borne in mind. First, and chiefly, that the natural fla vors must not be disguised by spices or other pronounced seasonings. There are sauces which bring out the game flavor instead of impairing it, and such only should be used. Let the French man have served to him vehison 01 grouse in form so elaborate that only a naturalist or chef could determine its character; but let us remember that simplicity is the highest art in the cooking of game. Even the accom panying vegetables should be selected with a view to supplementing its fla vors never interfering with them. "The second point to remember is to guard against overcooking. All game, especially the dark-fleshed, is better in flavor, and digests more easily, rare than well done. It is not necessary to carry this point to the extent affected by gourmets, who eat their game half raw just well warmed through. Nei ther should birds, venison, etc., be hung until 'high,' which simply means the beginning of a putrefaction as un wholesome as any other form of decay. But most game meat should be allow ed to properly ripen before being cook ed. Venison in cold weather may profit ably be hung in a dry place for three weeks. Quail, on the other hand, begin to lose in flavor twenty-four hours after being killed." Cnpolas Made of Paper. Paper cupolas for building are re markable for their lightness. A cupola of t-at kind consists of from twenty four to thirty separate pieces, and is produced over a wooden model by past ing huge rolls of suitable paper one over the other. Every separate piece runs from the base to the top of the hemispherical roof of the cupola, and thus forms a vault-like strip which is broad at the bottom and narrow at the top. For the production of these separate parts of the cupola roll paper of very good quality is used, which is first cut into the requisite length and breadth, , pan ln the quaiity of dairy goods that then moistened and stretched over the j jt n)Ust at alj hazards be retained un wooden model. Upon the first strip is impaired, especially in wluter-made pasted another, also moistened, over 6tock To do this the winter stable this a third, and so on until the neces sary strips of paper adhere firmly to each other and retain their concave i shape, and after being dried constitute hard, resisting pieces, which are made; weatherproof by oiling, polishing with ; hot Irons, asphalting and varnishing, and are then put together in the shape of a round cupola. Philadelphia Rec ord. Female Anti-Sa oon Crusade. The statute of limitations has barred prosecution upon a charge of malicious destruction of property made against I a number of women of I '.throp, Mo., ! who joined in a successful effort to drive a saloon from the place. As manv as thirty were arrested; every j present at the time of the dam age was summoned to court. J.ne pios- ecuting attorney of the county strove for two years to procure a conviction of somebody; reporters In numbers be sieged everybody concerned; dui not one of the women weakened or betray ed the secret. Twelve knew who was guilty of breaking the first window of the saloon, but they covenanted with one another to keep the knowledge a secret, and they have kept their word. When a man freely admits that hh wife is not stubborn, he can afford t. ' stop prayinjc THE FARM AND HOME MATTERS OF INTEREST TO FARM ER AND HOUSEWIFE. How to Set and Cultivate a Hedge Fence Batter Should Be Shipped in Good Condition Keeping Squirrels irom Corn Cribs. " To Make Hedge Fences. I have on my farm 134 rods of osage orange hedge. Up to the end of the t fr.i,ttr vdq t tit wViiori tim it wn a ' , f tt S1 nfr rfMl Crime a, ..v,- i farmers consider a hedge a nuisance, but if given the proper attention this is not so. The chief aim in makig a hedge fence is to have it tight near the bottom. To accomplish this set the plants five inches apart. The secret in getting a good fence is to get a good start of plants at the first setting. The soil should be rich or heavily ma nured. Cultivate the same as corn. It is a difficult task to keep a hedge within a prescribed limit. Start it three feet high and six inches thick, then trim closely eacu time. In spite of careful work the width will increase so that a periodical reduction by cut ting off some of the old wood is neces sary every few years. Two trimmings a season are usually sufficient except during a wet summer, when growth is rapid. Cut when the shoots are yet tender, damp, rainy weather being preferable. One man can trim a mile a day if done at the proper time. A care less or lazy farmer should not think of growing a hedge, for he will not take care of it. Orange Judd Farmer. Ship Butter in Good Conditiou. I believe, says a correspondent of the Creamery Journal, that butter can and onirht to be made so it could not be substituted. It is an article that has leen jn use a good many years and will reiuan a necessity and command a good price if properly made. Now, let every one who js interested in the dairy i,usjuess stop so much kicking and put his shoulder to the wheel of progress in the manufacture of pure creamery but ter. Let every owner of a cow who sends milk to a factory do his utmost to help his butter maker. The butter maker should attend to his. work care fully and see that there is nothing left undone in making and preparing his butter for the market, and I think it would give better prices, make it more pleasant to do business, make better times and better people. Squirrels in Corn Cribs. Wherever squirrels are prevalent, care should be taken to prevent them from eettinz at the seed corn. Itois not a good plan to hang the seed corn In the crib, as the open, slatted sides to allow ventilation the squirrel can easily enter, and his agility makes it impossible to keep seed corn from him, no matter how carefully it is braideU and hung where neither rats nor mice can get at it. The squirrel does not care for the bulk of corn in the crib. He is very dainty in his food, and is sure to take that which is hung up, and carefully dried for seed. The provoking part of it is that he destroys far more corn than he eats. He cares only for the chit or germ, leaving all the rest as only fit for hog feed. Exchange. . About the Hog. Must our breed of hogs be abandon ed? For a century or more the hog has been bred for "an aptitude to fatten," until it has been brought to a form in which the snout is disappearing and its body is too heavy for its legs. Fat has been the object, and also attained, but it is claimed that the hog has been so changed that it is now more sus ceptible to disease than formerly, while the quality of the flesh has diminished. One breeder in the West crossed his Poland Chinas with a "razor back" from Georgia, and reports that his pigs are hardier and the bacon brought bet ter prices. In England and Canada the farmers are using boars of the Tam worth breed, which produce more lean meat than fat, and the bacon from the hogs so produced brings from 15 to 17 cents per pound in England, while that from the United States, abounding in fat, brings from C to 8 cents per pound. The celebrated Smithville hams, from Isle of Wight County, Virginia, which have held their reputation in market for half a century, are from the "razor back" breed, and the Irish breakfast bacon is from hogs of the Tamworth and active Irish breeds. Barn Ventilatim. An Ingenious way of securing ven tilation on a long barn with two cupo las was as follows: There were large windows in the cupola, and a stick ran across from one window to the other that was six inches longer than the cupola was wide. This stick fastened on to these windows. Now, when the south wind was blowing hard it shut the south window and fastened out the one on the north side, and when the north wind was blowing hard It shut the north window and pushed open the window on the south side six inches, and in that way formed a cer tain amount of ventilation in the top of the barn. From the stables there ran ventilating flues that opened out near the roof. It was a very ingenious way of securing automatic action by the wind Hoard's Dairyman. Tlie Cow Stable. Twice a year, at least, the cow stable needs a thorough renovation Spring and Fall. Renovation should mean in this instance a rigid cleansing of the floor, walls and ceiling, so that there is no dust or dirt or persistent bad odor clinging about the apartment. Flavor now nlavs such an important must be kept, not like the ill-smelling place that it often is, but a clean, sweet, airy apartment. After you have once got it set in order it takes but a nominal amount of labor to keep it so, and vou have as a reward he: cows, clean, pure milk and more than though no especial attention paid to this. Of course, the more ern your stable, the easier it is clean and sweet. Ohio Farmer. Churning with Bull Power. I In winter we feed thirty poun ensilage and ten to twelve pount hay. and a grain ration, consistu two-thirds bran and one-third co seed, making about four quarts twsr i-nw i " - - . Our ensilage is made from nor corD which is cut five-eighths incn aud put in when the ears to giaze. The corn beipg ma - 1 makes up for the extra grain r: and also makes it unnecessary crease the grain ration during thel ter months. Our price for the yea butter is 27 cents per pound, an! cream is 30 cents a quart. We our cream with a separator, whlcl sens the work in the house, ond ahead of any other method of mi butter. Our separator and chv. run by a tread power, which Is od ed by a two-year-old bull who enjoys Jt very much. The power Is located in the carriage house, with a fourteen foot shafting running to the creamery. New England Farmer. The Shropshire Ram. The Wisconsin station found that by using a selected, well-bred Shropshire ram with ordinary ewes excellent re sults could be obtained. The lambs were dropped in March, and in April were given oats, bran and corn meal. In July ground peas were given in place of cornmeal and in September the quantity of peas was doubled until October, when oilmeal was added. The roughage was clover hay all summer, a little green clover and some rape. The result was that yearling lambs (over one year) weighed 220 pounds live weight and lambs dropped last March weighed 120 pounds in November. It is possible that if the ewe lambs are retained and mated with a pure-bred Shropshire ram better results can be obtained next year.- Bankiug Karth Around Trees. As it is often done, the banking of soil around trees in fall to prevent mice from barking them does more harm than good. If any sod, weeds or other rubbish are included in banking up the tree, the object is not only defeated, but the liability to injury is increased. The purpose should be to oblige the mice to climb up above the snow line and expose themselves to their enemies while gnawing the tree. This they will rarely do. for much of this work is done at night 'when their natural enemy, the owl, is most watchful. But if the mice find vacant spaces around the tree, as they surely can if sod or rubbish are used, they can work under this pro tection with greater safety than if the tree were not banked at all. Still it is better to bank young apple trees, at least as high as the snow line usually comes. The warmth from the tree makes a vacant space in the snow all around it, and it is under this protection j that most of the destructive work is ! flone Spontaneous Combustion. The fact that tire sometimes arises from the heat generated by fermenta tion was illustrated In a big malt house in Syracuse, N. Y., lately. The ware house held 1,800 bushels of barley ready for malting. It was unfortunate ly damp enough to begin fermentation. In so large a mass, this soon started smoke from the windows of the ware house. The fire department was called out, but as no flame was visible it did not know where to apply water without danger of causing the flames to burst forth and destroy the woodwork. The building was very old and inflammable. At last the grain was let out of the room in which it was piled, and by be ing shoveled around so that it could not set fire to anything, all further dan ger was avoided. There are often cases where hay is blackened by being fermented too much. Clover hay is most apt to suffer in this way because it has so much nitrogen that it heats very rapidly. Usually, however, there Is so much carbonic acid gas evolved by fermentation that it suppresses flame and the pile of fermenting mate rial merely smoulders. Burning Potato Tops. Much of the difficulty from rot in the potato crop comes from the general neg lect to destroy the potato tops so soon as the crop is harvested. Potato rot is a fungous disease which fastens first upon the leaves and stems of the pota toes, and is thence washed into the soil bv rains. It causes rot when it reaches the tuber. It is known that the germs of the disease adhere to potato stems and leaves until they are destroyed, and this can only be surely done by burning them. Yet we have known farmers to carry potato tops to the barnyard to be used as bedding, and composted with the excrement there dropped. No better means for propa gating potato rot could be devised than this, unless it be feeding rotting pota toes to stock and leaving the uneaten portions to be trodden into the manure pile. Exchange. Good Horses. Good horses are essential to prosper ity in any country, and American farm ers are every year now- losing the best markets of the world by not breeding high-class draft and coach horses to Most of these markets wait live or ten years forrfarmers to breed up and ma ture good horses. Those who get the good mares will be first to get into mar ket with good horses, and those who have to grade up will find it a long way off. There are but few good mares left and still less stallions, not enough to supply the demand when hreeding he- gins. estern Agriculturist. Smokehouses The best smoke houses are made of brick with a cement or brick floor. A house six by seven feet is large enough for most farmers. Seven feet is about the right height. If the door is made of wood, it should be lined with metal. The Inside should be provided with hooks on which to hang the hams or other meat. For providing the smoke, corn cobs make a good fuel. Massa chusetts Ploughman. The Cabbage Stein Rot. This disease has been fully deter mined by Dr. Edwin F. Smith, of the Agricultural Department at Washing ton, to be caused by bacteria. The dis ease can be induced in healthy plants by Inoculating them with the germs. There is no remedy for plants so dis eased, but the disease only appears when cabbages have been planted two or more years in succession on the same land. By planting, therefore, on new land, or where some other crop has been raised the previous year, the dis ease does not prevail. Vick's Monthly. Cost of Things in 1814. Julian Brewer, of Annapolis, as ex ecutor of his brother, the late ex-Senator Nicholas Brewer, has fallen into possession of a bill from William Kilty, debtor, to William Alexander, under The A. scene in The Slocum Laboratory, New York: The Discoverer demonstrating to Medical Men and Students the Value and Wonderful Curative Powers of his New Discoveries. NOTE All readers of this paper can have Three Free Bottles of the Doctor's New Discoveries, with complete directions, by sending their full address to Dr. Slocum's Laboratory, 98 Pine street, New York City. French Women as Business Helpers. Miss Anna L. Bicknell writes an ar ticle on "French Wives and Mothers" for the January Centuvy. She says : In the families where the father con ducts any business the wife becomes his best clerk and usually his cashier. The wives are exceedingly intelligent and acute, extremely sharp at driving onrprains, aim accurate in Keeping ac counts. They are their husbands' part ners in every sense of the word, and it is wonderful to see how they acquit themselves of such a multiplicity of duties. Self is completely annihilated; and if weak health is mentioned, it is never an impediment to what they have to do for their children or their hus bands, but is mentioned only as a dis agreeable accompaniment to a necessary fatigue, without an idea of using it as an excuse for shortcomings. COULDN'T MAKE IT. The bull that tried to butt down a bridge, and the goat that tackled an anvil, couldn't make it, and were knocked out, bruised j The curfew ordinance is enforced in and bleeding. From such bruises down to 1 about -300 Western cities, with such pin-head blue spots they are curable, easily good results that the women of Au and surelv. The men who get the worst j gusta, Ga., have petitioned for its en- uiuises always get the nest cure. niey make it everv time. There are right ways and wrong ways of doing things, as the bull and the goat found out" The best cure for a bruise is St. Jacobs Oil. The right way to cure is to use it and liiid out. Blind fishes, two inches long, similar to those found in the Mammoth cave, have been taken from a well belonging to Mrs. Jennie Bristen, at Kussell ville, Ky. OBSTRUCTIVE STORMS ALONG THE COA ST. Reports of maritime disasters along the coast come in thick and fast. People w ho "go down to the sea in ships" should bear in mind one thing in particular, namely, that it is highly desirable to take along a supply of. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters as a remedy for sea sickness. Nausea, dyspepsia, biliousness, constipation, malaria, nervousness and kidney trouble, all , succumb to its beneficent and speedy action. PERSONS WORTH KNOWING. French's bust of the late General Walker, which was secured through subscriptions of undergraduates, was presented to the institute of technol Dgy, of Boston, on January 5, the first anniversary of General Walker's death. Forty musicians of Kansas City have 3onceived the design of giving practi sal expression to Shakespeare's opin ion that music hath charms to soothe the savage breast, and will give a per- j formance on each Sunday afternoon to I llie inmates of the workhouse. Archibald, the name given to Bis- j marck's grandson, in honor of Lord j j Rosebery, is the favorite name of the Rosemarys, as James is the favorite Abercorns, Charles of the Richmonds, William of the Portlands and Anthony of the Shaftsburys. Chief Judge Andrews, who retired from tb,e court of appeals of New York an January 1, was elected an associate judge of that court in 1870. In 1881, ' when Chief Judge Folger rereigned to I nter the cabinet of President Arthur, Judge Andrews succeeded him, and since that time has not missed a day of active service. Harvard this year, for the first 'irae, has a colored person as a candidate for the degree of A. B. , in the person of j voung colored woman from Mil'erton, N." Y. The London Stock Exchange has an orchestra composed of the members of the exchange, accounted one of the 3nest amateur musical organizations in the city. 3 Terra cotta sleepers are :n nse on Japanese railways. The increased cost is compensated for by thegre.iter resist mce of decay. A dull, throbbing pain, accompanied by a sense of tenderness and heat low down in the side, with an occasional shooting pain, indicates inflammation. The region of pain shows some swell ing. This is the first stac of ovaritis, inflammation of the ovary. If the roof of your house leaks, my sister, you hava it fixed at once ; why not pay the same respect to your own body ? Write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. , and tell her all your symptoms. Her experi ence in f. i treating female ills is greater than any other living person. The fol lowing from Mrs. Axnik Curtis, Ticon deroga, N. Y., is proof of what we say: " For nine years I suffered with fe male weakness in its worst form. I was in bed nearly a y oar with conges tion of the ovaries. I also suffered with falling of the ryomb, was very weak, tired all the time, had such head aches as to make me almost wild. Was also troubled with leucorrhoea, and was bloated so badly that some thought I had dropsy. I have taken several bot tles of L vdia E. Pinkham's Veeetable 1 Compound, and several of her Blood Purifier, and am completely cured. It c is a wonder to all that I got welL'. ji sjjpigjg niiRFS WHfRF 11 FISF Fft lS. lb Cse M Hp cougn syrup. Tastes uooo. use 1 1 m time. s.piq py druggists. Triumph of Science. CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED IN ANY CLIMATE. James Bain's Heroism. James Bain, chief engineer of the ill-fated steamer State of Florida, not only risked his life, but deliberately sacrificed it, to save a woman. The distaster was most pitiful. The steam er collided with a bark in mid ocean, and both vessels sank almost immedi ately. Only two men were saved from the bark, and .only -A handful of passen gers and part of the ship's company from the steamer. Bain was safely in one of the life-boats, which was about to cast off, as there were as many peo ple in it as it could hold. At that moment he saw a woman at the steam er's rail. She was too dazed to move. The steamer's deck was almost level with the water. Bain deliberately left his place in the boat, stepped onto the steamer's deck, lifted the woman over the taffrail, placed her on the seat he had occupied, cast off the boat, and went down with the steamer. Every Day Heroism, by Gustave Kobbe in the January Century. actment there. A writer in a magazine has made the prophesy that in 300 years from now the world will only know three lan- guages English, Russian and Chinese. Success has attended an effort at banana growing in Fitzgerald, Ga., where a plant reached the height of 12 feet and put forth satisfactory fruit. In the number of murders Italy leads Europe. In the number of suicides Russia is ahead. 'A Perfect Type of the Highest Order of Excellence in Manufacture.'' WalterBaKer&Gols Breakfast (pa Absolutely Pure, Delicious, Nutritious. Gosfs Less Than QUE CENT a Cup.. lie' sure that you get the Genuine Article, made at DORCHESTER, MASS. by i WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd Established 1780. 1 Manly Power The Strength, Activity and Brain Power of Manhood are Restored to Weak Men Who Use Doctor San den's Electric Belt. Every Belt has an electric Sus It Kas a Patent Regu lator for pensory tree weak men. ix making c u r re n t ir mild or strong. Dr. Sanden's Electric Belt is today the ac knowledged means of recovering the power of manhood. It fills the nerves with new life: it increases the brain power, and removes all the weakening effects of indiscretions, excesses, etc., in fact, restores ycur strength. Are You Weak? It will cure nervous debility in any form, for electricitv is the life of the nerves and makes them strong. It checks all waste of power in two weeks. It cureB all kidney and bladder trouble?, rheumatism, lame back, etc. Send for our medical work, illustrated, "Three Classes of Men," free. Address SANDEN ELECTRIC BELT CO. 853 West Washington St., Portland, Or. Pleasf mrntion tfiis Paner For Accidents or Sickness, for Klon dike Traveler. Rancher or Family. P. ice $5.55. V 0" DARD-CLAFKE & CO., Portland, 0'. WHEAT Make money by succesful speculation in Chicago. We buy and sell wheat on mar gins. Fortunes have been made on a small beginning by trading in fu tures. Write for full particulars. Best of ref erence given. Several vears' experience on the Chicago Board of Trade, and a thorough know ledge of the business. Send for our free refer ence book. DOWNING, HOPKINS & Co., Chicago Board of Trade Brokers. Offices in Portland, Oregon and Seattle, Wash. r "'"cm KS&BLJui E T K? N S I ' Mrs. Wikslow's Soothixq syrup should always be J nsed for children teething. It soothes the child, soft- p ens the arums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and Is m C the beat ramedr for diarrhoea. Twenty nra centt a It 1 the best of all. K. P. K. IT. No. 3, '98. WHBK writine to advertisers, pleas mention this paper. ... HUE Edward Marsden, a student in Lane Theological Seminary, at Cincinnati, is the first native Alaskan to receive an education in any of the states. He has studied law, theology, mechanical engineering and has learned the trades of carpenter, bricklayer, house painter, tinsmith, piano tuner, clock repairer, book-keeping and typewriting. "Walter Baker & Co., of Dorchester,Mass.. IT. S. A., have given years of study to the skilful preparation ot cocoa and chocolate, and have devised machinery and systems peculiar to their methods" of treatment, whereby the purity, palatability, and high est nutrient characteristics are retained. Their preparations are known th$ world over and nave received the highest indorse ments from the medical practitioner, the nurse, and the intelligent housekeeper and caterer. There is hardly any food product which may be so extensively used in the household in combination with other foods as cocoa and chocolate; but here again we urge the importance of purity and nutrient value, and these important points, we feel sure, may be relied upon in Baker's Cocoa and Chocolate." Dietetic and Hygienic Gazette. Governor Bushnell, of Ohio, gave a pardon to Ralph Wintersgill, a life prisoner, on Christmas day, which was promptly refused. Wintersgill is now 70 years old, and has served 20 yeais. In declining the pardon he said the state had unfitted him for life, and i that he did not care to go back in his old age to a world that had forgotten him and preferred that the state should cure catarrh, lung troubles and consump ,...t;,. f noQ fr. k; t v.Q ot,a i tion is certainlv good tor and will cure continue to care for him to the end. i any waating diae that hunianity is heir AN OPEN LETTER TO MOTHERS. ,e3se j, wri(ing We are asserting 111 the courts our right to the : vou re.Kj fafe crCnerous offer in our paper, exclusive use of the word "CASIORIA, ana j " PITCHER'S CASTORIA," as our Trade Mark. I, Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of " PITCHER'S CAS TORIA, the same that has borne and does now bear the fac simile signature of CH AS. H. FI.ETCHER on every wrapper. This is the original " PITCHER'S CASTORIA " which has been used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years. Look Carefully at the wrapper and see that it is the kind you have always bought and has the signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on the wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. March 8, 1897. SAMUEL PITCHER, M.0. John M. Penniman has been for 50 years a member of the Boston police force. His age is 75. Piso's Cure for Consumption has been a God-send to me. Win. B. McClellan, Chester, Florida, Sept. 17, 18!)5. Russia's population has increase! j during the last 100 years a fraction less j than 1,000,000 annually. After being swindled by all others. Bend us stamp for particulars of King Solomon's Treasure, the ONLY renewer of manly strength. MASoX ( HK I('4L CO., P. O. Box 747, (Philadelphia, Pa. i In Mexico City Hop Lee advertises an Ameircan restaurant. Statf. of Ohio, City of Tolkdo, j Lucas Cot XTV. ( Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doiny business in the City of Toledo, County an'1 State aforesaid, an-j that the said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and everv ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the nse of Hall's Catarrh Ctji e. FRANK .1. CHEN'EY. I Sworn to before me and subscribed in mv . presence, this 6th day - of December, A. D. 188G. . A. W. GLEASON, j SEAL j i Hall's Catarrh Cu- Notary Public. taken internally, and acts directlv on thM d and mucous surfaces ol tne system. Sen., .or testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY cfc CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 73c. Hall's Family Fills are the best. HOMI I'KODUCTS ANl I'UKK FOOD. AH Eastern Syrup, so-called, usually very light colored and of heavy body, is made from jrlucose. "Tea Garden Ortv" ia made from Sugar Cane and is strictly pure. It is for salt bv first-ciass urocers, in cans only. Manufac tured by the Pacific Coast Syi'.up Co. All an iline uTen Ganlen lirivtf have the manufac turer's name lithographed on every can. A school for training young colored men in agricultural pursuits is abou to be established in Tuskeegee, Ala. Hercules Special (2 actual horsepower) Price, only $185. American Type 1" . Jt I g fl Jk II II Bk 1 f-. I 5 Company Cor. AT LAST! f I Remarkable Discovery of an American Medico Chemist. ITS GREAT VALUE HUMANITY. TO How Every Reader of lliis Paper May Obtain the New and Free Scientific Sys tem of Medicine CORRESPONDENCE-ADVICE AB SOLUTELY FREEAND PROFES SIONALLY CONFIDENTIAL Workers in the wide, unexplored field of modern chemists' are daily astounding the world with new wonders. Professor and layman vie with each other in their com mendable efforts to lessen the ills of human ity. Yesterday it was Pasteur and Kock, and today it is Sloc um, with a new discov ery which is the result of years of careful study and research. Foremost among the world's greatest chemists stands T. A. Slocum, of New York City. His researches and experiments, patiently carried on for years, have finally culminated in results which are proving as beneucial to humanity as the discoveries of any chemist, ancient or modern. His efforts which for years had been directed toward the discovery of a positive cure for con sumption, were finally successful, and al ready his "new scientific system of medi cine" has, by its timely use, permanently cured thousands of apparently hopeless cases, and it seems a necessary and humane duty to bring such facts to the attention of all invalids. The medical profession throughout America and Europe are almost unamious in the opinion that nearly all physical ail ments naturally tend to the generation of consumption. The afflicted die in the short, cold days of winter much faster than in the long, hot days of summer. The Doctor bits proved the dreaded dis ease to be curable beyond a 'doubt, in any climate, and has on lile in his American and European laboratories thousands of letters of heartfelt gratitude from those beneited or cured in all parts of the world. No one having, or threatened with, any disease, should hesitate a day, but should write at once. Facts prove that the Doctor has discovered a reliable and absolute cure for Consumption (Tuberculosis) and all bronchial, throat, lung and chest troubles, stubborn coughs, catarrhal affections, scrof ula, general decline and weakness, loss of ilesh, and all wasting conditions, and to demonstrate its wonderful merits, he will send Three Free Bottles (all different) of his New Discoveries, With full instructions, to any reader of this paper. Simply write to T. I A. Slocum. M. C, 98 Pine street. New York, giving full address. There is no charge for correspondence advice strictly professional and confiden tial. 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