f . a r iwx i r I u r. ill THE T1VERT0N2 T'VE come, Judge, to nsk If you'll let me tell you wlmt no ontfon eatt!i tlon't know but me, 'lmut that bunk mystery. Yes, tliank you, I will sit down. A tire feels good ou a uight like tills. Tain't often such ns I have u ehnuce at tills kind of comfort and luxury. Wlmt do I know about the bank mys tery? Iand sakes, judge, time they opened the bank that day ten years ago and found the bank vault broke Into jiikI the wife blowed up and not a dol lar gone. I could have told It all. The Iieople or Tiverton ain't done talking Jiud wondering 'bout It yet. and there ain't never been no one llvln' as could tell what It all nivuut but me. I brought some papers here ' they a iv, Judge where It's all written down and 1 can swear to It If you like. 1 don't want them never used, though, unless I die and something comes up us would make It lieot for my family to know, though there's this In It I'd ruth er die than have 'em know. If It's all the same to you, Judge, I'd like to tell It to you. Seems like I'd get rid of a load and would lie happier and die easier feelin' I'd spoken It ull out to one llvln' human. You'll be glad to listen V That's good of you. I knowed you was a kind man nd a Just one; that's why I come to you. No, thank you, I don't smoke; 1 put all that money away for my wife nd children. Do you hear that storm? Outside seems like all the evil powers was let loose. You can't Judge 'bout It here, it comes kind of muttled like through those thick curtains and It don't shake this great house like It does some. It's this kind of night that makes men huddle together, Judge, and plan how to get rich and have tine things ouch as the likes of you. I've been through It all; I know. I've felt ha If I bad as good a right to 'em ns anyone and I .s bound to have 'em. too. I wnm't brought up to no trade nor noth in' and fair means seem In' to fail, I took to tlie other. Yes, Judge, I started out In life a thief and n robber. I prospered fairly In a small way and no one didn't catch up with me for some time. .Then I Joined a gang In for everything. Lord, but It was fascinating! It Vns like drink; I couldn't give 1t up and I couldn't get enough of it. I was In prison and out then, the old story, till I married and begun to have little ones. Then. Lord know, what helped mo something didand for the sake of my wife ami children, I broke loose from ever.vtl.ing and came here, where no one didn't know me, to start over again. I had some money and opened the res tanraut Just opposite the bank. Long ns I didn't rend the papers I got on well; but let me see them and I'd hunt through 'em for the robberies, and I'd be crazy, plumb crazy for a while, aching to be In It all again. See In' 'Unit my old pals gettln' In trouble didn't make no difference. Time come, though, when I begun, to enjoy life differently, and to feel my self more respectable. The love for the old Hfo begun ter go till I could read about It without gettln' all Bred up. I thought then I was all right. Then they eotue here, part of the gang I'd belonged to. First I kuowed of It was Boeln' 'em In the restaurant. I 'spleloued they warn't here for no good and It most took my breath away. They kuowed me quick enough, too. and nothln' wouldu't do but I must join 'em. I was the very man they wanted. I could help 'em and I was bound to 'cm 'Twaa the biggest thing they'd under taken yet; the bank. They'd come on to examine the situation, knowing that Mr. Durkee, the uew mill owner, would make a big payment noon and the money for It would lie In the bank here. If there weren't anything else, that would be a big haul, worth havln' and me belli' here decided 'em, I do think the devil brought all hi friends and relations with him that night to tempt me. 1 forgot how to sleep aud Just couldn't stay In bed. I wouder I warn't In tattera by mornln', with the devil tuggln' at me u he did BANK MYSTERY. 3 and tryln' to keep me out of the room where my Hlomtli' children la v. I-iord, It makes me creep and perspire all over now to think of It. Yer see them bank people come over to my place for lunch best part of the time, and they all knowed my little people, and the mill people kuowed 'em, too. My oldest boy worked in the mill and they'd been as kind as could be when he's sick. Christmas time they's good to Iiini. too. and there warn't a bank officer but what had remembered my little people, even to the watchman.' Seemed like robbing my own people, somehow, l's bound not to inform on the gang, and they's bound ter rob I her bank, but I cursed 'em in my heart for conilii' Jiwt when I was gettln" rid or the old life for good and all. "fwas awful! Well, judge, you know how them rooms over the bank was rented to start a new dally paper. I made 'em swear solemn ns my name warn't to appear nowhere. I'd plan It all out and give 'em points and be on hand at the last, but I had to be cautious. They found out when the money was to be paid mid 'greed on the night be fore for the robbery. I had all mapped out for 'em where and how they were to loosen up the boards of the Hoof In their room above, so we could break through and lower ourselves Into the vault when the time came. Then you see we'd only have the safe to get Into and the great iron door between us and the watchman. Everything was ready, and we was pretty sure the money wns paid. Do you hear that storm now, Judge? "fwas like that ten yearn aim tn.nliriit dark as Egypt, with the rain nml wlmt a perfect hurricane; a terrible night; the kind of night for any sort of crime. The men chuckled to themselves 'Twin. a fortune sure this time, and they'd all lie on the way to comfort nml safety be fore day. I ain't never seen 'em an . cited, Xothin' hadn't gone wrong and not mn couiiln t now. We had sentinels stationed mim.i tn give the alarm, but there wasn't much danger on a night like that. We had planned so as to linvo the door of the safe ready to blow open when the watchman went down cellar to see to his tires. I knowed time of night he did go, seeln' him orteu from my house across the way through the window of the bank, but to make sure we stationed a man where he the ignnl at the proper time. With the watchman downstairs and we shut In that vault, with solid ns. 'twnrn't In the range of possibilities tor no milium to hear us. "fwas planned that when V0 limbn through the celling me and one of the others was to go down tlrst with the lanterns and tools and get the door ready for Jim Uroogan, the leader of the gang, to come down nml u i,o dynamite and be ou hand to take out tue money.. Lord, but It wnn lust the niiri.i- r..i such a piece of work, and after I had examined to see If all wns safe, know lug tlie dangers better than the others, we broke through the floor and lowered the ladder, and there we wns right In the vault. 'Twaa well for me I'd hit ti right, for my life warn't worth much ir any o my planum' railed to work. Torn Doolau In a hurry went down first and when I was half way down he started back, saying In a hoarse kind of whisper: "Who called me?" "No one, you fool," said Jim. "Then." he said, and he mn nnot ma on the ledder, "someone Is down there. Twlct I heard someone say; 'Go back, go back.' " "We'll gag him," said Jim, and me and him went down tnd turnA.1 nui, lanterns round lookln' everywhere, but there warn t no one there. "What's the matter with the fool?" growled Jim, and went back and tried to send him down again, but he Just wouldn't go, so Jim cursed him and come himself, and be and me begun to get the safe door ready to blow up. That's, a thing that takes Unit and care. Judge, but we went at it with a. will, and never a word. It was so still you could almost hear your heart beat, when all of a sudden came a smothered cry, loud and clear, like a woman's. We stopped work and looked at each other, Jim's race white and scared. "Lord, what was that?" he said. "I often hears 'em ou the street like that. ' I said. "That warn't un the street; It sounded close by," said Jim. "We couldn't hear nothln' outside in this place." "Xonsense," I eald, "don't you make a rool or yourself, too, aud spoil it," aud I went to work again. 1 could see his hand trembled for a while aud then got steady again. 'That must have come through the room upstairs," he said presently. "Queer, though, It sounded so close." Then we worked on and there warn't nothing more to be heard. Rest of the gang might all have been dead men, for all the sound they made and we didn't say nothin', and so the night weut on. - " At last we had It all ready and were only waiting for the signal to blow It up aud then money enough to make us all rich. 'Tain't such as you cuu realize the excitement and the strain of bucIi ft moment. To know It's all there. ready,, aud then to have to wait! It's easier walkin' over red hot coals. It's all right to go on aud work, but to stay st'U aud only breathe and listen gives a man the shivers. Presently Jim caught my arm. . "Say. I thought I heard voices, did you?" he whispered. "The men upstairs." I said. "Sounded down here. Have your pistol ready." : I took my lantern and went round the vault again carefully, and then held It up to examine the walls. Then I shook my head. There warn't no way we could hear no one. "It's the queerest place I ever was in," said Jim, "and by Jove I'll be glad when we are out of it. Why don't that signal come? Suppose there's any hitch? I swear I hear voices again." Just then came the signal and Jim begun to apply the dynamite, but his hands trembled so nml his eyes looked so wild aud excited, his own wife wouldu't know him. "The money, the money," he whis pered, "we must have It now." We got out of the way Just in time and then out came the door. "The Inside door, quick," sold Jim. but the explosion had mnde that rail liwlde and we Just could lift It out. "Have the bag ready," said Jim, as he leaned forward to haul out the great piles of bank notes aud silver we could see by the light or the lanterns. "Hands off, or you are a dead man." It was a voice that would most have waked the dead. I dropped my bag and Jim drew back his hand and caught hold of me with a grip like iron, and we began to go slowly back to the lad der. "The combination is all right; we have them now; they can't escape us." We were half way up the ladder when we heard the click, click of the lock, and as we drew the ladder after us we could hear the rasplug or the hinges or the Iron door. "'"'y. fly for your lives; we are dis covered," said Jim, as he went around to warn the men; and In the darkness uud the wind and the rain they went away and 1 ain't never seen none of 'em since. I heard, though, as when they found there warn't no one there and the bauk people didn't know nothln' 'bout It till the next morning, they Just believed the bauk was haunted, sure. Do I know what It wns. Judge? There ain't no one else ns does know, that's sure. 'Talu't much, after ull. Yer see, playin' 'round with my little ones, I found as I could make 'em hear all kinds of noises anywhere I wanted, and people crylu' and lnughln'. It was run fur them and I often done It: ven-i trlloqulzln', I believe you call It; but that night's the last time. Yer see, none of the gang didn't know 'bout that, and I don't keer ever to have 'em know It nowi-. It saved the bank without my In rorniln', aud that's all I care for. .' Oh, no, Judge, the bank don't owe me nothln'. You'll take care of the pa pers? Thank you. I'm obliged to you for listening, too. It kind of makes me feel easier. No, no, thank you, I won't stay and take no more of your time. Don't get up; I can And my way out. What's that you say, Judge? You honor and respect me me ? And the bauk land, Judge, 'twarn't me; 'twas my wife and children saved the bank and I'm proud of 'em-proud of 'era' Judge. Good nlght.-Phlladelphla Times. Eyes. Artificial eyes were first made In Egypt. They were of gold and silver and subsequently of copper and Ivory! Hundreds of years later, in the six! teenth century, when they were made In Europe, porcelain was the substance used, and the maker usually stamped his address on the white of the eye. A lobster's skin when shedding sputa down the back and comes oft In two equal parts. The tall slips out of the shell like a finger out of a glove. Swedes believe that the devil baa power over a child until It U baptlied. f 1 f designed "nTwisri . . especially for the use .7er M Prairi Pimple. Southwestern Louisiana is bordered along the coast with broad sandy and gravelly plains to which the name of "pimpled prairies" has been given. This curious title comes from the circular mounds, arranged iu zones and ulong Intersecting Hues, with which large areas of the plains are covered, l'or merly these mounds, which average fifty feet iu diameter and attain occa sionally a height of ten feet, were sup posed to have beeu made by ants, with whose nests they abound. But recent ly Professor Clendenln, or the Louis iana State University, has round rea son for thinking that the mounds wore formed liiiotigii the biowiug up of mud by gas escaping from vents in tlio ground. The arrangement of the mounds in zones and Hues Is accounted for by supposing that the gas vents existed along the fractures radiating from an earthquake center. " Ancient Insects. Recent discoveries In the coal mines of Central France have furnished by fur the greatest advance that has ever been made in our knowledge of the In sects which Inhabited tlie world mill Ions of years, as geologists believe, be fore the time when man made his ap pearance upon the earth. In that won derful age when the carboniferous plants, whose remains constitute the coal beds or to-dny, were alive and flourishing, the air aud the soil were animated by the presence or flies, grass hoppers, cockroaches, dragon-tiles, spi ders, locusts aud scores or other spe cies which exist but slightly changed at the present day. But the Insects or those remote times attalned.a gigantic size, some or the dragon-flies measur ing more than two Teet from tip to tip or their expanded wings! .The remains or these insects have been marvelously preserved in the strata or coal and rock. A Kite a Mile High, - Since an account was glvei in this column or the high kite-flying experi ments at the Blue Hill Observatory, near Boston, all previous records havo been eclipsed there. In 189") tile great est elevation reached by a kite was 2, 500 feet above sea-level, or 1,000 feet above the summit of the hill. During the past summer half a dozen times a kite was sent up more than a mile above sea-level, and on ouo occasion the height attained was 7,8.13 feet above the sea, being 1.500 reet more than a mile above the hilltop. The experiments are made with the so called "tailless" or Eddy kites, and the "box" or Hargrave kites. The highest flight was made by an Eddy kite. The purpose is scientific, as the kites carry self-recording Instruments by means of which the temperature and humidity of the .'air at great elevations can be measured. Sometimes the kites pass through clouds, the thickness of which Is revealed by the record or the in struments. ' The Wonderful Phagocytes. When a drop or human blood Is plac ed between two plates or glass a d ex amined with a microscope It Is seen to coutniu, beside the minute disks which give it its red color, little whit ish grains called "white corpuscles." If the glass is warmed to a tempera ture equal to that of the "unman body these corpuscles, or phagocytes, as tlu'y are otherwise called, will be seen to put out and retract minute processus, which, as If acting the part of feet, enable the phagocytes to crawl over the surface of the glass. The Russian naturalist, Metchnikoff, has discovered that the phagocytes In our blood feed upon the microbes or Inrectious dis eases, when such microbes are intro duced into the system. Sir Joseph Lister, president of the British Asso elation for the Advancement of Science, believes that this action of tte pha gocytes, which Is scientifically unmed "phagocytosis," "la the main defensive means possessed by the living body against Its microscopic foes." When ever a wound is made in any part of the body the phagocytes, like well trained soldiers, rush to the breach and make war upon the putrefactive mi crobes endeavoring to enter the system. Iron Quarrle. Very Interesting fucts, not generally known, about the iron mines of Spain, were discussed at a recent meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain. It is from Northern Spain, In the neighborhood of Bllboa, that the greater part of the Iron ore Imported for the use of British steel-makers is obtained. Steel is made by the basic process from iron ore containing phos phorus; but for the best qualities of steel, which Is made by the open hearth process, a purer ore must be used, and It Is that which England Imports from Spain. "Nature," says the English sci entific Journal Nature, "seems to nave er.' Tort Until receutlv ' e.K(J has been ,.' ' utnJ steel In Spain. DU been exported to EnsJ mines or Northern Spam as being rather n,i " the ordinary ses JZr". mountains themselves art or lron ore covered naa ft thin layer or earth. Thlsi. and it onlv ren,i.,. ,. 8 and load if ... 7"" when If l. ung Wi edge by Its own gravity." 1 The Great Gas Indu.t,. The artificial gas interest ofjL try is an exceedingly tap extensive one. There r In ,w borhood or 1,200 cities and O United States lighted in large n manufactured gas. In addltlcTa. are thousands or homes In wnu to being largely, ir not wholly, ed ror cooking and heating mJL About 600,000,000 is Invent to! works property In this country ai , gas Interest is perhaps second lis portance only to the Investment tor, road properties. The ens Indnotrioo .,,..,.- , . exposition at Madison Stiuare r. J New York City, opening on Ju i 1897, and holding ror two week I this exposition will be shown m practical apparatus and applta wuicu enters into tne manufactw,, distribution or gas as an lllumta, or heaUng agent. One of the reatures of the eipoj will be cooking demonstration! y arternoon and evening, two conpeJ aemonstrators having been for this work. A gas tower or large dlmeaslou J been arranged tor and will be one the great curiosities at the fair; n slating or an extremely ornamenUlt most brilliantly illuminated spetuJ lar piece, the dimensions of whicbif be twenty reet at the base, and reul! to a height or fifty-five feet, on rtl will be artistically arranged abontJM gas jets. . Evidently the gas people prop demonstrate to the public that Or product is capable of producing tqci It not superior lighting effects to M claimed for the electric light. km Jul ii'li Origin of " Brother Joaathu,' When Washington, after being d pointed general commander of army of the revolutionary war, ml to Massachusetts to organize It, u make preparations for the Mm the country, he found a great wiwtl ammunition and other means neceait to meet the powerful roe he hadttmj tend with, and great difficulty to tain them. If attacked In such a condition M cause at once might be hopeleu. this occasion, at that anxious pufaU a consultation of the officers and otoj was had, when It seemed no way corf be devised to make such prepantM as were necessary. Jonathan Trumbull was then On ernor of the State of Conneeficutitt the general, who placed the greatestiH llance on his judgment and aid, remit ed: 'We must consult brother Jomttu on the subject." f ho 7onml did so. and the uowmn was successful in supplying mw 4 the wants of the army. When difficulties afterwards m and the army was spread overthecom try, It became a by-word, "We m consult Brother Jonathan. The term Yankee Is still applied portion; but "Brother Jonathan" to now become a designation of the wb country, as John Bull has for Engl xlm'tA Plnln a mrnnor In Nevada recently r soned out a verdict that was more slble than half the verdicts nm l"UUU" . , skit A certain Irishman, conceivioi .iu., .i t,.n,n nnnn some W would facilitate Its burning, olrew . ,i , , o teir noon v a, suiau miraiii imi" - - " -burning piece, but not possessing s sufficiently quick to cut tnis u - . iv.o The mown lnio a uiuuuu . lowing was the verdict delivered n great gravity by the official. . "tani De cuiieu ouiviw, - didn't mean to kill himself; It visitation of God. bekase m struck by lightning; he dldnt me want or Dream, 101 uc ... thing whatsomever to brentne w . ... .. . . , J..I..U w M'" irs quite piain ne umu : was about, and so I shall bring w j for want of common sense.'' . . . hnnk. "COOP" in tJiancueva tuuui . n , , . t to marie Of nenaus, meuuuu " - .i nt 1ft had S p" "spell," which the physician P0'. ed "constitutional lethargic lnj which lasted for forty day". the age of 20 he slept for finr t i-.i -aa mnna sleep m ner last rewiuni on icfi 0- almost a year from April 20, iw- tll March, 1863.. Our Idea of something awftd be to become a great musn lomr hair, and then get bald. mildSt' When women oppow --- ,w I is usually because oi some feel against the women fohV to fit lb. T hi r