THE GIRL WITH A MILLION By D.C C 1 1 A PT E U VIII. t Con t in ued. ) "Well." said Mr. Frost. "What Is up now, sir?" "I lump over with lVibrosfcl from Bel gium this morning." said O'Rourke. "With IVdroki?" returned the visitor. "iMhroskl has an introduction from mo to you. I'nless ho ha to know U that In to nay, unless he finds it out by com ing here while you anil I are together lie need not know that we havo mot to day. He has a plan which will serve our purpose perfectly. With hi name iichind !t. I think it certain that our people ill accept it." lie sketched IVmroski's nightmare rap idly, and Mr. Frost listemil. "There Is ability In It. of a sort." he aid. "As a fool-trap, it has merits: bnt It won't act." "There are groat advantages to you and to me in this plan, wild as it looks." re plied O'Rourke; "but lVhroski must be handled with extreme care. I send hitn to you in the first place Ixvause I can trust your acutenesa and your self-inter-esl. I want him to be treated with per fect deference. I want him to be greet ed with enthusiasm. I want at first an air of consideration for his plan, and then a fiery acceptance of it. I am going back to Belgium. 1 have important busi ness there, and I shall be compelled to leave the matter iu your hands. Per haps if you ninnage it to my satisfaction I may b of service to you. I am not altogether without influence, and I nny have something to do with the nomination of the auditors." "I am at your service. Mr. O'Rourke," be said, "and I will do my best. To tell the plain truth, there has been a good deal less in the business than I looked for, and it carries a good deal "of danger with it." "I think we have said almost all we have to say," O'Rourke said, rising. Frost hooked him forward with a beckoning fin ger. "Not all on my side. Listen to this and don't flare out. now. There's an empty house in the Old Kent road. Now, don't flare out. I'm going to give you nothing but the number. You'll do your self a very considerable service with the British government, and you'll provide something for the Times to get up and howl about, and you'll be of the greatest nse to me on the other side of the water. Come now, Mr. O'Uourke. It's a capital thing all round good for you. good for the newspapers, creditable to the police, and good for me. You stand secur in the confidence of the government, and they'll catch nobody. The stuffs there to be seized, and for no other earthly purpose. I ought to know, I reckon. And we do want a splash of some sort real bad." Is everybody absolutely safe?" "Absolutely safe. I guarantee it." "Very well. Good afternoon. Frost." "Good afternoon. Shall I see you again before you go?" "I think not. I shall probably start to-morrow. Remember. The utmost def erence and enthusiasm for Dobroski." Mr. Frost nodded and took his way. "A very finished rascal is Frost," said the patriot to himself when the visitor had been shown out of the front door. "I5ut capa ble. It took me a year to find him out, though I was guided by that shifty eye of bis. It is surprising to notice how very few of these fellows think it worth while to study manner." CHAPTER IX. There was only one thing just now that troubled O'Rourke. He wanted to get back to his heiress hunt, and he did not want to leave Dobroski in his lodgings to bring there any mad theorists and blood thirsty dynamiters who might choose to gather about him. But Dobroski himself saved him from this dilemma. "You will not think, sir," he said on the second morning of his stay, "that I do not value your hospitality. But I shall be more free to move if I am away from you, and shall still, after the publicity of our joint arrival here, be able to communicate with you with per fect freedom." O'Rourke was more than politely re gretful at parting from Dobroski, but he recognized the wisdom of the pro jKtsal, and the old man took lodgings at a quiet hotel much frequented by Continental people who were not of the conspiring class. This left O'Rourke free to go back and pursue his suit, and he had written a hasty looking note to Dob roski to say that he was unexpectedly , called to the Continent, when a serving maid brought up the card of no less a person than his friend Maskelyne. He hardly knew what to make of the visit, and could only conjecture that IMaskelyne was here to make some sort of appeal or protest, with respect to Angela. But he stood with a look of friendly expectancy on his face, and held the door of his room back with one hand while he reached out the other in welcome to his friend. "Why, Maskelyne, old follow, what brings yon in London. Come in, old chap, cotre in." Maskelyne shook hands cordially erough, but with extreme gravity, a grav ity unusual even for him. "Dobroskl's staying with you, I be lieve?" he said, questioningly. "I have a a important message for him. I follow ed him to Brussels, but could learn noth ing there until I found out last night that you and he had come over together, end that be was actually staying with ou." "He was, until this morning," said O'Uourke. "I wanted to show these peo ple here that an Irishman isn't afraid of sympathizing with him. They were talking about our getting Into holes and corners at Janenne, and seemed to think hat I dare not own the grand old fellow n London." "Where la he staying now?" Maske lyne asked. "I want especially to find "What?" cried O'Rourke, gayly, alttlng kVwu at bis desk td writs the address, C Murray" "Is Maskelyne also among the anarch ists?" "No." said Maskelyne, "I'm an out ider there as elsewhere." If this speech expressed any inward bitterness, nelthe? oioo nor manner declared It. "You're going back to Honfoy, I sup pose?" said O'Uourke, In a casual friend ly tone as he wrote. "Well, no," said Maskelyne. "I fancy not. Or not at all events for a time." "Oho!" cried the other to himself, energetically applying a blotting paper to the address, and looking round smilingly at his friend. "Beaten out of the field alivady." "I you go back to Janenne?" asked Maskelyne. "1 start tonight." returned O'Rourke. "I promised Farley to go back again." Of course Maskelyne saw through that little subterfuge, and of course O'Rourke knew he would. "To-night?" said Maskelyne. "You'll do me a service, won't you?" "Try me." returned his friend, with smiling seriousness. "I'm staying at the I-nnghnm," Mas kelyne said. "There's a lady there nn American whom I knew at home. She's going to visit Brussels, anil except for her maid she's alone. Neither she nor her maid speaks a word of French, and I shall be obliged if you'll put yourself nt her service in case she wants anything. "Certainly, certainly," cried O'Rourke. "IK I know her?" "I think not." answered Maskelyne. "She's a youngish widow, rather pretty. and sinfully rich. A Mrs. Spry. "And what state of riches might a poor man like yourself care to call sinful?" "Well," said Maskelyne. with n smile, I think two millions may deserve it." "Two millions!" O'Uourke whistled and then laughed. "Dollars?" "No. Sterling." "Two millions sterling? Maskelyne, I ask you seriously, as a man of money, do vou think there is such a sum? To an Irishman and a journalist it sounds fabulous." "Yes. It's large, isn't it? But people seem to go for all or nothing in our part of the world. They're not afraid of risk ing what thev have. They are not afraid of risking what other people have, either. The poor girl's husband only died six months ago." , In du time O'Uourke sent out (for a cab and drove to the Ijingham. carrying his simple baggage with him. Maskelyne received him, and wore his customary manner with perhaps an extra shade of gravity. "And now for the lady," said Maske lyne, when the repast was over. I must Introduce you. He rang the bell, and on the servant's entry, made him convey his compliments to Mrs. Spry, and to ask if it would be agreeable to her to receive him. "Y'ou may say," he added, "that Mr. O'Uourke is with me." The man came back in a very little while to say that the lady would be pleas ed to receive Mr. Maskelyne and his friend, and led the way to a handsomely appointed sitting room. The lady before whom O'Uourke stood bowing a moment later was small and plump, and carried her head on one side with a pensive co quetry. She had large eyes, and a rnther coquettish little nose, turning up nt the tip. When she smiled she showed white. small and regular teeth. Her hands were small, delicately white, and very helpless looking. "Prettyish !" said O'Rourke to himself. "She's worth a score of Miss Butler." But perhaps he saw her through an at mosphere of dollars. "Of course you know of Mr. O Rourke already?" said Maskelyne. "He is one of the notabilities on this side of the water, and is preMy often beard of on our own. "I have the pleasure to know. Mr. O'Uourke already," said the lady, in her purring voice soft, ' languid, American. "I heard him speak at New Y'ork. I was very much impressed by your address, Mr. O'Uourke." They set out for the railway station, where they were joined by the young widow, who wre a traveling dress of tweed, cut in such a manner as to dis play her pretty figure to the best advan tage, and a wondrously enticing little cap of tweed to Biatch the costume. The bustle of departure began to grow rapid and urgent about them. Maskelyne shook hands ami went his way, and O'Uourke and the charming widow found a carriage. It was empty, and the young man made no demur about accompanying the lady, ami the lady gave no signs of displeasure at being ac-ompanied. There was still a soft twilight In the streets, in which all objects could be plainly seen, but the gas was already alight within the station, and a lamp burned in the carriage roof. "I don't think," said Mrs. Spry, "that women ought to be so helpless as they are. It's the fashion to be helpless. We can't get outside the fashion can we now? But it's the tyranny of mankind that makes it." "Don't you think," returned O'Rourke, with his bright face beaming and his manner at the same time full of gentlest deference the sweetest good-humored po liteness and gayety In combination "don't you think that ladies tyrannize over us much more than we over them?" "You don't think that," she returned, setting her little head rather more than ever on one side, and looking at him out of her big, expressive eyes. "You Klon't really think it, Mr. O'Rourke." "I think it," declared Mr. (O'Rourke, and at that instant the train began to glide out of the station. "But for my own part I don't object to the tyranny." CHAPTER X. It was night in London, and a sum mer rain falling. Mr. George Frost sat in a dingy apartment Illuminated by a single candle, by the light of which be was scribbling unmeaning phrases on a dirty sheet of letter paper, "No grub, no funds. Thirty-seven pounds dropped last night. I'll nevr '.-mil a eaxJ n'r,. f wUi-r Ww Va. I in mora 1 Ai.ll 'int Ve.: ke!$ isinst rh.inte iwa.e t'ire. It its'! pv wtl forever like this. A ktviK-k at M rfrert Wift.r i'i ".timid1 of lis itw11.i. bul fc,'t .i jwing will, a.id thd no ti -if t th"f which came blii.id.vlng up tY nirr .ind hill tod OMli.l, liU .V-.r "Come In!" he cried, in stsrlled an swer to a lapping on the pnnel. and a slatternly aermnt girl pushed her head round the edge of the dor. "Here's somebody for you, Mr. Frcwt. Gentleman with a portmanteau. II didn't give no name," , "I'll come down and have a look at him," returned Mr. Frost, taking up his candle. Four separate flights of dirty wooden stairs, unenrpeted, brought him to the hall.' Frost, holding his candle high, viva need toward the shadowy figure of his guest. "It's yon !" he ssld, with an odd tough. "Come upstairs." The guest, selling the portmanteau, mounted after him. and the dingy apart ment at the top of the house was reached. "Is this the palace you continually live In?" asked the guest, with the faint est possible trace of some foreign accent in his voice. "I had expected from your Inst letter to hare found you In marble balls, with vassals and serfs at your side. Oho! you have been at It again. I sup pose," said the visitor, making a move ment In Imitation of the dealing of a pack of cards. "Isn't It time you dropped that? Haven't you lost enough by this time? What should you have done If I had not turned up?" "1 don't know," Frost answered, care lessly enough. "But 1 was thinking at the very minute when I heard you knock nt the door, nnd saying to myself, I'll drop it.' I'll tell you the truth. Zeno " "Tell me as much of the solid truth as your constitution will allow, but do not call me by that name. WroblewskofT will answer. It's a jawbreaker, but It's very easy when you come to know It. Well," said Mr. Zeno, smiling still, "this Is the advantage of talking over things. I have lived in New York a year or two. You knew me there. You meet me hero; You know me to be a safe man- a man to be depended upon. You introduce mo to Dobroski Well, at what ar you staling?" "I'will see you boiled in oil," returned Mr. Frost, with extreme slowness; "I will see you roasted on a gridiron, I will see you cut up so extremely fine that a microscope won't find you nnd then I won't introduce you to Dobroski." Zeno got up from his seat, and kneel ing on the Hoor unstrapped his portman teau and took therefrom .1 razor case, a small metal soap bowl ami a brand new shaving brush. Frost watched him In si lence. Zeno took off his coat and threw It across the back of a chair, tnen produced a pair of scissors, and taking a great handful of his beard, sliced it o.T before the glass; then another, ami another, and another, until he was close cropped all over the cheeks and throat and chin. Next be attacked the mustache, and cropped that also so close as the scissors would go to the skin. Then pouring a little hot water into the nietnl bowl, he began to lather himself with great energy, and then to shave. liven to himself the metamorphosis be produced must have seemed more than a little droll. I'nder the razor he came out no longer Greek anil austere in contour, but chubby, with fat round cheeks, ami a chin very curi ously thrust forward and pointed, and beneath the lower lip and the base of the chin th"re was a good half inch in length less than one would have expected to find. The change was amazing, and when Mr. Zeno drew a spectacle case from a waist coat pocket, set the glasses on his nose, and, removing a wig, appeared with half an inch of sandy natural bifir below It, and a forehead an inch higher than it had been, tlie disuise looked impenetrable. He took a handkerchief from his coat pocket, rubbed a corner of it im the soap in his shaving !hw1, nnd applied it vigor ously to his lips. The corner Of the handkerchief went crimson, and Mr. Zeno's cherry lips grew pallid nnd dry. He soaped nnd moistened another corner of-the handkerchief, ami scrublwd nt bis eyebrows. The handkerchief became black, and the eyebrows sandy, like the hair. Then he resumed his coat, set the two candles upon the table, drew a chair between them, and sat down. (To be continued.) Could Swullotv the Kerlh. A queer little iiiiinnil Is the one call ed the "hIIpist nnlinulcult'," but which mefi of Bcieiico cull "Puruiiiocclum." Tm most wonderful thins nbout tliH liti.'e creature is the rapidity with which It multiplies. By a beneficent provision of nature they seem to lo coine exhausted mid die after the 170th generation. A naturalist points out that If a Parainoecluui family should have n run of link and nil members live for aW) generations they would crowd every other living thing off the earth nnd be themselves In bulk bigger than the whole planet, while If they were to have enough link to survive to tlie IXKith generation the sun, moon nnd stars would be flouting lu a universe of them. These little creatures are plen tiful In stagnant wuter. Chicago Tri bune. lieu I ii n I ii if the t-'trmt Tiff. Mr. Youiighuslmnd (reading from pa per) Married Blunche-De Smytbe to Walter Wellington Beere. Whut old memories that name n wakens! Mrs. Y. (blushing) I never Imag ined you knew of my engagement to Walter. Mr. Y. (chillingly) I wus alluding to Blanche. Tttth r. Very Likely, jenk(, Id this a monkey trick, to turn out the lights nnd leaves us la the dark like this? Mrs. Cotneup Indeed, I feel real ner vous In this simian darkness. Balti more American, Not H Uood Dodder. "I'm afraid this motoring crnze will be the death of me." "I didn't know you had an auto?" "I haven't; but I've got a game leg." Houston Post. Rapid growth of the finger nails Is 0 "Igu of good health. i - v. r v The .cwr I'urmer. The President's address last month at the Michigan State Agricultural Col- J lege U so clear uti expression of tlie Conditions of modern luriii life that 'a future historian may turn to It to , read our times. All national leaders I have told us that the tanner Is the I backbone of the nation. Washington land Jellcrsoii were farmers, ami gHid ones. The Illinois thai bred Lincoln 'was one Mist farm -Chicago was then 'only u small town. The President of to-day, not bred in farm lite, nlllioiuli j he has been a practical rani liuian, Is .the lirst to express the unity between I farm labor and all other kinds. The ''winner to him is an expert mechanic 'aud business man, whoso problems are precisely those of the workuiau In the town, w ho depends for siiivcss uii In dustrial and social co-opcratlon. He , must bo nu educated, aggressive lar lleipant lu the work of life, competing i Willi the farmer of L'uiope, Inviting to his workshop of many ucrea the most skilful young men, learning from technical student ami the practical ex 'iH'tieiuv of his nclghlKira the best that Is known nbout his business. City ' workers, meeting lu the friction of 'crowded life, have always learned tlielr I craft front one another. The fann er has until recently been lu social 1 and business Isolation. Now he Is a 'citizen of the world, often closer lu 'lolut of time, to the nearest city than his grandfather was to the farmers of the adjacent town. The difference be tween the towiisinan and the country (man In educational and Intellectual opiKirtunltles and In Industrial respon sibility Is rapidly diminishing. That 'means tlie diminishing of the old real or fancied disadvantage of farm life which drove ambition and Initiative to the city Tor opport unity to show tl i- selves. The advantage remains and .Increases, for no matter how near to gether modern Instruments of unity, 'the trolley and telephone, bring city land country, broad acres still remain broad, and produce the conditions of free nnil Independent life. Youth's Companion. To Ilcmrojr lneol. The grayish black s'luasli bug Is dllllcult to manage. Gathering the cg' and the old hug early In the spring Is Inlstrloua but sure. If thoroughly done. The bugs will crawl uin tt piece of hoard laid among the vines, nnd may be gathered and caught. The use of poisons will do no gd In the wise of the bugs, as they do not eat the leaves, but pass their beaks through the outside of the leaf to suck the Juices, and will not consume any of the poison. In a series of ex periments lu the method of prevent ing the attacks of the squash vine bor er the preventatives employed were purls green at the rate of half n tea spoonful to two gallons of water, corn cobs dlned In coal tar, and the kero sene emulsion; the application of the parls green and the kerosene was re jM'ated after every hard rain until September; the cobs were dipped III coal tar again once in three weeks. All three of the applications seemed to he beneficial, with perhaps a little something In favor of the corncobs ns being cheapest ami most convenient. The odor, of the tar has no effect on the Insects, but sometimes repel the moth, causing her to lay her eggs else where. Wrrd Culler nnd Halherer, Weed uro u coiistafft source of trouble to the gardener, cropping up quicker than he can cut them down. and Kslllng the npiM-nranco of the lawn. A Massa chusetts man has Invented on Imple ment Intended to help him solve tin problem nnd light en the lalsir of stopping and dig- gin? up the roots. . .. i.i ,ui KKW WKKU t UTTER H cviouiii.-.. weed cutter und gatherer, as shown In the accompanying Illustration. The cutter Is adjustable, and Is ois-rated by a lever which terminates close to the handle of the Implement. The gatherer Is placed In the rear of the cutter. In front of the cutter are a pair of small, light wheels. It will be Been that after bringing the Implement close to the weed a pull on the lever Ih all that In required to operate the cutter. As the Implement U pushed ou to the next pot, the weed Is gathered up by the rako and carried on. , Care of the Iledye. When the hedge planta begin to die out the cause may sometime bo traced to lack of plant food, lhere la con I slderable wood removed from hedge ' plants every year when the hedges are trimmed, and this annual loss cannot I be sustained by the plant unless they are assisted. Apply wood ashes freely very fall. Iteslrmliiv lluriloeU. Like nil Id ilaK the burdock Is eas ily destroyed lu cultivate! Held. It I In by places, such ns fence sides, lane, corners around the buildings, pastures, aud the borders of woodland, that bur dock give trouble. Put even In these (hey are not dllllcult to destroy. Fann ers who go over their Held twice H year will soon have no burdocks. In cutting them care should be taken to strike below the crown. Every plant cut In Jhl way must die. The cutting may be done at any time of the year when the ground 1 not froen, and It I, of course, much more easily done when the plant uro young. While It I not dllllcult to cut off a small tap root with the knife, It I much inoio dllllcult to accomplish the same when the root ha attained h diameter of nu Inch or more. Two or three year of insistent cutting will remove near ly all burdocks from the by places of farm. To ilie Plus a llnth. The unfortunate pig has nlway had the reputation of being the most un cleanly uulmal In existence. This I not entirely the fault of the pig. us his environ ment I generally accountable for li I a cleanliness. Pig raisers sel dom attempt to give the lg u bath, as It I nl iii o n t Impossible to catch and hold them, even for a no 1IATII. minute. Nevertheless a Missouri stockman tncklcd the problem and suc ceeded In planning an apparatus by which the pig are given n gsn! wash ing Itcfore they are slaughtered. It should also prove equally a useful nt other time. The const ru1 Ion and o; eratlon of the dipping tank, a It l called, will be plainly evident by n glance at the iicocmpaiiylng Illustra tion. Resting on the ground I the wa ter tank, which Is connected to nn In clined Inlet and outlet. On the In cline of the outlet are tiny stairs to assist tlh' pig In ascending. In prep aration for hi "nntiual" the pig Is forced down the Incline Into the water, and If his common sense doe not di rect him on the Incline, he Is ppslded .'rem behind with n bar. In fact. In time this device may bc"oim very fashionable with pigs, and It would not be surprising to hear of them tak ing their dally "dip" hereafter. Vermont's fl.OOO.ooil Suvar Crop. Various report Indicate that this has been the best maple seuon for years. The average sugar per tree tap ped range from 'Jt to 4 pound. Last year ri,iNN),(sN) tree were tapped, nnd as large a number this year. Five thousand tons of sugar worth $1,(khi, KHi I a crop of Importance to the Gr'ii Mount a I ii State, remark. the Country Gentlemen, especially as the national pure food law (which ranks si ml only to the oleo bill u bring ing about an Immense reform In the direction of common honesty lu mer cantile transactions) absolutely forbids the wiling a Vermont maple sugar syrup and product that which Is not actually uud entirely what It professes to be. Highway of I be Fulore. The "futuro American highway," ac cording to an Inventor whose pamph let Is reviewed In Engineering News, will be n Hived roadway l-D feet In total width, divided by longitudinal curbs Into eight separate roadways, four for passage lu each direction. He provides two Hi-foot roadways for ani mal traction vehicle and a 4-foot walk at ench side for the stray hj deKtrlnns who may still Indulge lu the antiquated method of locomotion that nature furnished. The rest of the width la devoted to automobile road. As the cost of this remarkable high way would amount up to between $10),(KK) and fL'fHMKM) per mile, the In ventor does well to cull It a "highway of the future," C'abliaire Hot. Black rot has been very destructive on cabbage and cauliflower for several seasons, and nieuim of relief, even slight, will be welcomed by growers. Recent Investigation by the New York station nt Geness bIiow that the germ of disease mny lie curried over winter on the dry seed, a fact previously doubted by scientists, nnd that these germs may produce the disease when Inoculated Into the healthy plunts. It Is, therefore, a wise precaution to dis infect the cabbage seeds, as removing one possible source of Infection. This can be done very cheaply, euslly and safely by soaking tho seeds for flftocn minutes In corrosive sublimate solu tion of 1 to 1000-strenath. "Wild Silk." Among the peculiar products of Man churia, which are becoming better known to tho outside world since the opening of that country, Is "wild silk," produced by an Insect named Antheroea pernyl, which lives upon the Mongoli an oak leaves lu southeastern Manchu ria. The annual production for a few years past 1b estimated at 15,000,000 co coons. In Shantung this silk Is manu factured Into pongee. BLIND MAM WILL 1H! BENATOn. The Democrat of Oklahoma have He lerlcd ns one of the l ulled Mute Ken atois to represent Oklahoma, Thomas p, Gore, of Law ton. who I totally blind. Ills nomination I equal to an ehstlon. Thl I Hie Mist time In Km history of the Fulled Hlntes that blind mini ha ever I n neiit to th Senate, n Mr. Gore will be when state hood Is accomplished under the present proposed constitution. Mr. Goto has Im-cii In politic nil Ids life, beginning a a page In slsslppl Senate when b" wa but 11 THOMAS r. ;c:. year old. It was during that time that he lost hi eyesight by nu accident with an arrow gun. Three year priv Ivously he had lost his Icrt eye, a play mate, In a moment of passion, striking li I nt with a stone. Mr. Gore Is but M year of nge. 1 ! Ilvis nt Bnwton. ha n wife and four children, and is a lawyer by profes sion. His memory Is n wonder. When his father prepared to send him to a blind school, he refused to go, saying that sch'sd for the blind did not fur nish him the Ixsik and oportuii!!y ho desired. So he went to the public Hch.sil nnd college, getting through by reason of his acute memory. V 1 Ah t tlLS 1 1 Watery Eyes. Relief may beibtaln cl by bathing the eyes several times A day with u wash consisting of ten grains of pure tmrax and two ounces of camphor water. Rheumatic K hoe. Try salicylate of sisla, live drams; tincture of mix vom ica, three drams, uud essence of pepsin enough to make four oiuiei-s. The ilosn for an adult Is one tcaspooiiful every two or three hours. ' Superfluous Hair. A growth of hair Is annoying to a girl who wears short sleeves. Depilatories are dangerous und electrolysis, the only sure cure, Is an expensive treatment. To minimize the trouble dark hairs may be bleached. Wash the anus with u weak solution of ammonia mid water. Then i"ur a lit tle peroxide of hydrogen lu the water and apply with a piece of linen. The bleaching process will have to bo ro pcated from time to time, but peroxide is harmless to the skin. Nasal Catarrh. lu the treatment of thl lerslsteui uud often intractable dis order, good results have been obtained by the Internal administration live or six times each day of one-half tciisjon f ul doses lu one-half ounce of water of a mixture of one ounce of sis-clllc echin acea and two ounces of sttlliugla. Thu hitter Intensities the uctlon of echina cea in its inlluence uwn the mucous surfaces. Tincture of gelsemluiii, two drops every hour dining thu day, push ed to a physiological point, will ntmrt a catarrhal cold. Three grains of salicy late of strontium, added to each dose, reinforces It If rheumatism Is suspected. Neuralgia. If the neuralgia Is In tho right side of thu fare the left hand should be placed in u haslii of water an hot as can be born; or If neuralgia Is In the left side of tho face, then tho right hand should be placed in the hot water. It Is usserted that In this wuy relief may bo obtained In less than live minutes. The two nerves which hnvo tho greatest number of tad lie endings are the fifth nnd the medium nerve. As the fibers of these two nerves cross any Impulse conveyed to the left hand will affect the right sldo of thu face, or If applied to tho right hand will affect the left side of the face. This Is on account of the crossing of the cords. No War of Judtflnv, "What are the running expenses of your army?" asked one South Ameri can ruler of another. "Oh, I don't know," replied the ono addressed. "Tho army hasn't had a chance to run for a long tlmo now." Yonkera Rtatesmnn. If a man prefers chewing tobacco to smoking, ho always says chewing Isn't bo Injurious to the health. i ,. If any one gives you more thun ha gets In return, rest assured It Is counterfeit . iv r. .. -1 -s-