Jbe Doetor'$ By Hesba CHAPTER XXV. "I will send the child to you in a cab on Wednesday," the woman said, a I rose and made my way towards the hall; 'you have not told me your address." I paused for a moment. Dared I tell her my address? Yet my money was paid, and if I did not, I should lose both It and the refuse I had bought with it. Besides I should awaken suspicion and Inquiry by silence. It was a fearful risk to run; yet it seemed safer than a pre cipitous retreat. I gave her my address, and saw her write it down on a slip of paper. , . In the afternoon the little girl arrived quite alone, except that a man had been hired to carry a Bmall box for her, and to deliver her into my charge. This was a great relief to me, aud 1 gladly paid the hilling he demanded. The child was thinly and shabbily dressed for our lon Journey, and there was a forlorn loneli ness about her position, left thus with a stranger, which touched me to the heart. We were alike poor, helpless, friendless. "I'm so glad!" she said with a deep drawn sigh of relief; "I was afraid I should never go, and school is such a heavenly place!"- The words amused yet troubled me; they were so different from a child's or dinary opinion. "It's such a hateful place at Mrs. Wil kinson's," she went on, "everybody call ing me at once, and scolding me; and there are such a many people to run errands for." "What is your name, my dear?" I ask ed, sitting down on my box and taking her on my lap. Such a thin, stunted lit tle woman, precociously learned in trou ble! Yet she nestled in my arms like a true child, and a tear or two rolled down her cheeks, as if from very con tentment. "Nobody has nursed me like this since mother died." she said. "I'm Mary; but father always called me Minima, because I was the least in the house. He kept a beys' school out of London, in tapping Forjst, you know; and it was so heaven ly! All the boys were good to me, and we used to call father Dominie. Then he died, and mother died just before him; and he said, 'Courage, Minima! Uod will take care of my little girl. So the boys' fathers and mothers made a sub scription for me, and they got a great deal of money, a hundred pounds; aud somebody told them about this school, where I can stay four years for a hun dred pounds, and they all said that was the best thing they could do with me. But I've had to stay with Mrs. Wilkin son nearly two'months, because she could not find a governess to go with me. I hate her; I detest her; I should like to spit at her!" "Hush! hush!" I said, drawing her head down upon my shoulder again. "Then there is Mr. Foster," she con tinued, "he torments me so. He likes to make fun of me, and tease me, till I can't bear to go into his room. You'd hate Mr. Foster, aud Mrs. Foster, if you only knew them." "Why?" I asked in a whisper. My voice sounded husky to me, and my throat felt parched. The child's impotent rage and hatred struck a slumbering chord within me. "Oh! they are horrid in every way," she said; "they frighten me. He is fond of tormentiug anything, because he's cruel. But they are very poor poor as Job, Mrs. Wilkinson says, and I'm glad. Aren't you glad?" The question jarred iu my memory against a passionate craving after re venge, which had died away in the quiet and tranquility of Sark. Ought 1 to do anything for him? Was there anything I could do to help him? "He is ill, too," pursued the child; "I heard him say once to Mrs, Foster, he knew he should die like a dog." III! dead! My heart beat faster and faster as I pondered over these words. Then I should be free indeed; his death would release me from bondage, from ter ror, from poverty those three evils which dogged my steps. I had never ventured to let my thoughts run that way, but this child's prattling had now forced them into it. Kichard Foster ill dying! what ought I to do? There was one thing only thut I could do, only one little sacrifice I could make for him whom 1 had vowed, in childish ignorance, to love, honor and cherish in sickness and in health, until death parted us. A home was secured to me for twelve months. I had enough money still to last me until then. My diamond ring, which had been his own gift to me on our wedding day, would be valuable to him. Sixty pounds would be a help to him. I set the child gently away from me, and wrote my last letter to my hus band. Both the letter and the ring I en closed iu a little box. A great thump against the door brought a host of fears upon me. But before 1 could stir, the insecure handle gave way, and no one more formidable appeared than the landlady of the house,-carrying before her a tray on which was set out a sumptuous tea, consisting of butterel crumpets and shrimps. She put it down on my dressing table and stood survey ing It and us with an expression of be nign exultation. "Those as are going into foring parts." she said, "ought to get a good English meal afore they start. And this, my mas ter says. Is a testimonial to you." I could hardly control my laughter, and I could not keep back the tears. It was a long time now since any one had shown me so much kindness and sympa thy as this. The dull face of the good woman was brightened by her kind heart ed feeling, and instead of thanking her I put my lips to her cheek. The next morning found us in France. From Honfleur to Falaise warm, genial sunshine filled the air. The slowly mov ing train carried us through- woods where the autumn seemed but a few days old. We psued through miles upon miles of orchards, beneath which lay huge pyra mids of apples. Truck-loads of them stood at every station. The air was scented by them. Children were pelting me another with them. It almost like going into a new world, and I breath ed more free.ly the farther we traveled down into the interior. At Falaise we exchanged the train for a small oninifcn. which bore the name "Xoireau" conspic uously on its door. At length we started off on the last stage of our journey. Finally our omnibus was jolting and rumbling down some steep i.n I narrow treats, lighted by oil lamps swung arr ss them. Only at the iun where e stop ped was there anything lil.e life. 1 woke up Minima from her tie. p aud heavy sleep. "We ar here at Xoireau!" I said. "We have reached our home at Inst!' The door was oHned before the chill was fairly awake. A small cluster of bystandcrs gaiheri d rutin J u i as we i fjilemma Stretton alighted, and watched our luggage put down from the roof. Minima was lean ing against me, half asleep. A narrow vista of tall houses lay to the right and left, lost iu impenetrable darkness. The strip of sky overhead was black with midnight "Xoireau?" I asked in a tone of inter rogation. "Yes, madame," responded a chorus of voices. "Carry me to the house of Monsieur Emile I'errier, the avocat," I said, speak ing slowly and distinctly. The words, simple as they were, seem ed to awaken considerable excitement. The landlady threw up her hands. wl;h an expression of astouishment. Was it possible that I could have made a mis take in so short and easy a sentence? I said it over again to myself, and felt sure I was right. With renewed confi dence I repeated it aloud, with a slight variation. "I wish to go to the house of Monsieur Emile Parrier, the avocat," I said. But whilst they still clustered round Minima and me, giving no sign of com pliance with my request, two persons thrust themselves through the circle. The one was a man, in a threadbare brown great coat, with a large woolen comfort er wound several times about his neck; and the other a woman, in an equally shabby dress, who spoke to me in broken English. "Mees, I am Madame Perrier, and this is my husband," she said; "come on. The letter was here only an hour ago; but all is ready. Come on; come on." She put her hand through my arm. and took hold of Minima's hand, as if claim ing both of us. A dead silence had fall- -' ' t isMfi-Hf HI n - i-.-.Hi "MADAME UNLOCKED THE DOOR." on unnti th little crowd, as if thev were trying to catch the meaning of the Eng- lish words. But as she pushed on, lead-1 ing us both, a titter for the first time ran from lip to lip. I glanced back, and saw Monsieur Perrier, the avocat, hurriedly putting our luggage on a wheelbarrow, and preparing to follow us with it along the dark street. 1 was too bewildered yet to feel any , . . . : 1 , Wa do., in Pfsnivi in A ' BSlOUlsuuiewi. I. v "tic ,u ...uvv, ... remote part of France, and I did not know what Frenchmen would or would not do. We stopped at last opposite the large, handsome house, which stood in the front, in the photograph I had seen in London. "It is midnight nearly," said Madame Perrier, as we came to a standstill and waited for her husband, the avocat. He passed through the garden gate and disappeared round the corner of the house, walking softly, as if careful not to disturb the household. At last wbe reappeared round the corner, carylng a caudle, which flickered In the wind. Not a word was spoken by him or his wife as the latter conducted us towards hitn. We were to enter by the back door, that was evident. She led us into a dimly lighted room, where I could just make out what appeared to be a carpenter's bench, with a heap of wood shavings ly ing under it. "It is a leetle cabinet work of my hus band," said Madame Perrier; "our cham ber is above, and the chamber for you and leetle mees is there also. But the school is not there. Come on, mees." We went down the broad gravel walk, with the pretty garden at the side of us, where a fountain was tiukling and splash ing busily in the quiet night. But we passed the front pf the house behind it without stopping at the door. Madame led us through a cart shed into a low, long, vaulted passage, with doors open ing on each side; a black, villainous look ing place, with the feeble, flickering light of the candle throwing on to the damp walls a sinister gleam. Minima pressed very close to me, and I felt a strange quiver of apprehension; but the thought that there was no escape from it, and no help at hand, nerved me to follow quietly to the end. The end brought us out into a mean, poor street, narrow even where the best streets were narrow. A small house stood before us; and madame unlocked the door. We were conducted into a small kitchen. There was an oil lamp here. Madame's face was illuminated by it. There was not a trace of refinement or culture about her, not even the proverb ial taste of a Frenchwoman in dress. The kitcheu was a picture of squalid dirt aud neglect. The few cookiug utensils were scattered about in disorder. The stove before" which we sat was rusty. Could I be dreaming of this filthy dwelling and this slovenly woman? No; it was all too eal for me to doubt their existence for an instant She was pouring out some cold tea into two little cups, when Monsieur Perrier made his appearance, fcis face begrimed and his shaggy hair unombed. He stood in the doorway, subbing his hands, and gazing at us unflinchingly with the hard stare of a Norman peasant, whilst he spoke in rapid, uncouth tones to his wife. , I turned away my head, and ahut my eyes to this unwelcome sight "Eat, mees," said the woman, bringing us our food. "There is tea. We give our pupils and instructresses tea for sup per at six o'clock; after that there is no more to eat." We had the same vaulted passage and cart sited to traverse on our way back to the other house. There we were ush ered into a room containing only two beds i ai.4 our two boxes. I helped Minima to undress, an! tucked her up !n bed. Bha put her arm round my neck, ana drew down my head to whisper cautiously Into my ear. "They're cheats," she said earnestly, "dreadful cheats. This isn't a splendid place at all. Oh! whatever shall I do' Shall I have to stay here four years?" "Hush, Minima!" I answered. "Per haps it is better than we think now. We are tired. To-morrow we shall Bee the place better, and it may be splendid af ter all. Kiss me, and go to sleep." I was awakened, while it was yet quit dark, by the sound of a carpenter's tool in the room below me. Almost immedi ately a loud knock came at my floor, and the harsh voice of madame called to us. "Get up, mees, get up. and come on," she said, "to the school. Come on, quick!" The air was raw and foggy when we turned out of doors, and it was so dark still that we could scarcely discern the outline of the walls and houses. The school, madame informed me, was regis tered in the name of her head governess, not In her own; and as the laws of France prohibited any man dwelling un der the same roof with a school of girls, except the husband of the proprietor, they were compelled to rent two dwellings. "How many pupils have you. mad ame?" I inquired. "We have six, mees," she replied. "They are here; see them." We had reached the house, and she opened the door of a long, low room. There was an open hearth, with a few logs of green wood upon it. A table ran almost the whole length of the room, with forms on each side. A high chair or two stood about. All was comfort less, dreary and squalid. But the girls who were sitting on the hard benches by the table were still more squalid and dreary looking. 'I h Ir faces were pinched, and just now II. ie with cold, and their hands were swollen and red with chilblains. They had a cowed and frightened expression, and p. cited askance at us as we went iu bih.nd madame. "Three are English." said madame, "and three are French." She rapped T)ne of the swollen hands which lay upon the table, nnl the girl dropped it out of sight upon her lap, with a frightened glance at the woman. Minima's fingers tightened upon mine. The head governess, a Frenchwoman of , about thirty, was now introduced to me. Breakfast was being brought in by one ' of the pupils. It consisted of a teacupful or collee at tne Dottom ot a ing uh.-iu, .U! u !.! t,f,,,. K nl IW n Inmre fnhlesnnnn to feed ourselves with. nnil a henneil nlnteflll of hunches of 1 bread. I sat down with the teat at the long table, and ate my food, with a sink- lug and sorrowful heart. As soon as madame was gone, Minima erg are now buBy raaking over anj re flung her arms around me and hid her i heirioom8. pearls, sapphires ta.'..niLb0S?"!- ..., ,MM mJand emeralds are to be the favorite '. i.. ...t' i i t , h..ro 1 four vears. and It will kill me. I shall die if you go away and leave me." "We must make the best of it, Min ima," I whispered to the child, through the hum of lessons. Her shrewd little face brightened with a smile that smooth ed all the wrinkles out of it, That's wharrathers7id!" she cried; "he said, 'Courage, Minima. God will take care of my little daughter.' God has sent you to take care of me. Sup pose I'd come all the way alone, and found it such a horrid place!" (To be continued.! THEIR LUNGS KEEP SOUND. Batchers Are Immune from Consump tion in Any Form. "Butchers never die of consumption." The big man with his sleeves rolled up wielding the cleaver at the block said this as he threw a bock steak on the scale. It sounded more like a trade supersti tion than a fact, but so far as diligent innulrv has been able to discover it is true, although not generally known out- side of the meat chopping craft. Eutehers are uo longer lived than men In other walks of life. They are sub jected to all the other ills that human flesh Is heir to, but consumption they do not have.. So far as a reporter was able to learn, not a single case is on record of a butcher In this city being af flicted with the Incurable wasting of the lungs which claims Its hundreds of thousands of vlcitlms annually. The fact Is well known among butch ers and has been often the subject of their comment, although none of them can give a reason for It "No," said a man who has swung sides and rounds In Washington mar ket for the last twenty years, "I have had rheumatism and typhoid fever and lots of other things, but nothing has ever been out of gear with uiy lungs and the same Is true of every other butcher in this town. I know nearly all of them and I never heard of one of them having consumption. They don't drink blood or take any especially good care of themselves either. I don't know why It should be so, unless it's because the continual inhaling of an atmos phere of fresh meat is strengthening. "I have often thought when bearing of consumptives going to Colorado and Egypt that I know of a climate nearer home that would do the business Just as well If they would stay in this stall for a while and swing meat they would get tfell quite as quickly as they would on the top of Pike's Peak." New York Mail and Express. The follies of youth are drafts on old age, the payment of which is Irnpera- , tive. EDWARD'S CROWNING ROBES TO BE WORN AT THE COMING. CORONATION. Rules Concerning Display at England's Great Ceremonial Uo Not Please Ladies Keaeat Queen's Request That No Imported Costumes Bo Worn. London aristocrats are feeling gloomy over the duke of Norfolk's sup plement to the London Gazette, iu which as earl marshal of England he gives detailed regulations concerning robes and coronets to be worn by peers and peeresses at the approaching coro nation. The disappointment Is chiefly among the fair sex. They are not to be allowed all the furbelows and tin sel which, to feminine minds, form the "slue qua nou" of such Important cere moniuls. To begin with, Queen Alexandra's re quest that all coronation gowns should be made of English goods and by Eng lish couturiers has had anything but an enthusiastic reception. Heretofore the white satin dresses and ruby velvet robes have come from France and Dame Fashion stubbornly refuses to be satisfied with the home supply. It has Just leaked out that the wives of three prominent diplomats have secretly passed In their orders to a Rue de la Pais firm, and It Is more than proba ble that many other gowns signed by French houses will find their way Into the royal cortege. Another cause for pouting lips Is the regulation that peeresses must wear their robes over the usual full court dress, Instead of over the white satin toilets elaborately trimmed with gold laces and embroideries which were "de rlgueur" In former days. One thing alone remains unchanged, and that Is the robe. As In George IV.'s time It will be of ruby velvet, the cape furred with miniver pure and bordered with rows of ermine, the number of the lat ter varying according to rank. The duchesses may show four rows, the marchionesses three and a half, coun tesses three, viscountesses two and a half, while the baronesses will have to be content with two. An Innovation, this time In gentle men's attire, which will detract not a little from the gorgeousness and pomp of the spectacle, Is the fact that peers are ordered to wear their robes over full court dress, uniforms or regi mentals. At all previous coronations they were worn over white satin doub lets and trunks and white silk hose. But what has caused the greatest dis content Is the restrictions regarding coronets. The clause stating that "no jewels or precious stones are to be set or used In the coronets, or counterfeit pearls Instead of the silver balls" came like a thunderclap to many, especially to the dames who had already had their blazing diamond circlets pre pared. It is now definitely settled that only the king and queen and the duke and duchess of Cornwall will wear Jeweled coronets. All other coronets are to be of silver gilt, caps of ruby velvet, with ermine lining and having a gold tassel on top. The baron's coronet will have six silver balls on the rltn, the vU- count's Blxteen, the earl's eight, with gHi,j strawberry leaves between the poIrjts; tne marquis' four silver balls ,, ,.. itprnntplv mid tne duke's eight gold strawberry leaves, If peeresses cannot wear Jewels on their heads they evidently plan to do so on their bodies, and all London Jewel stones. Ropes of pearls are to be worn from the shoulders as though fastening the velvet ruby robes, some what the same way In which Queen Alexandra wore them at the opening of parliament. Contrary to expectation no new crown will be made for the queen. 1 TTl T. J ... .. ...1 ' awaotm la Ia Ka o 1 Vl 1 1 , enlarged, but it will undergo no other modification. His majesty on this eventful day will appear before his subjects In the same elaborate robes worn by his granduncle, George IV This costume consists of three parts. The most Important Is the "dal matica'" or Imperial robe. It Is a three-cornered mantle forming an In verted "X" and fitting very closely about the shoulders. All over It are ' mn1l a ml, iv, Mo roil nrnfiaoa Beneath It Is worn the "supertunlca," a sort of short pelerine having sleeves of gold cloth embroidered with gold flowers. Above both dalmatlca and s pertunlca Is worn the "armllla," which Is also of gold cloth, but hag a deop ermine border. It Is placed on the king's shoulders by the archbishop of Westminster, who exhorts his majesty to see In this mantle "a pledge of d! vine grace enveloping him completely." Chicago Dally News. DAKOTA'S WILD WIND CAVE. Cavern 3,000 Feet Below Earth's Bar- face Acqn red bj Government. Dakota's famous wind cave has late' ly been acquired by the government, and Is to be made a show place. It well deserves Its name, for the log cabin built over Its mouth has had to be fas tened to the ground by heavy timbers. and the logs mortised and pinned to prevent the building from being raised from its foundations and hurled sky ward by the Immense force of the wind from within. The first explorer of the cave dis covered that when the mouth was clos ed by heavy timbers the motion of the wind ceased, and a person Inside did not feel it except at a few particular points. It was for this reason that the cabin was built over the entrance, with an Inner door fitting closely against the portals of the cave Itself In such a way that the air was completely block' ed. A siglitseerer came to the door of the Utile hut and heard a roaring sound era anatiug from the earth, followed by such a slamming of door that the build Ing shook. It was nothing but the open Ing of the inner door to allow ot the exit of a guide, but It had a terrible ou ml. Within the cabin the visitors saw cothlug but a cupboard, from wibch the two guides provided them with candles NEW TRIBE OF V-' i I X ?.'jZtflSrj r Sent out to examine the native races of the North Pacific and Arctic coasts, the Jessup North Pacific expedition has just made a valuable anthropological re port in the shape of a series of striking photographs of Eskimo tribes rarely, pos sibly never before, visited by whites. A full set of illustrations and measurements were made of the inhabitants of two small villages. They show many peculiar characteristics possessed by these people which are totally difl'erent from those of neighboring tribes. Three types which have almost been isolated from outside communication are here shown. The inhabitable area of these people is far inland in Arctic Alaska, east of the mouth of the Mackenzie Tlver. They belong to two tribes, called the Koukpagmiut and Xunatagmiut. Their physical characteristics are so differ ent that It almost warrants the supposition that they are the remnants of some lost tribe that originally emigrated from Asia. in tin candle-sticks attached to strips of wood. The party then formed In line, as the Inner door could be opened long enough to admit one person at a time. If It were kept open the wind would tear the building to pieces. A guide went first. Seizing the bar fastening the door, he turned It slowly to near the end of the clamp that held It; then, giving It a quick wrench, dart ed through the door as the force within sent It open. As soon as be was Inside he seized an Iron ring, and, adding his strength to that of the guide, who had remained without, slammed the door. With one man on the Inside and one out, It was much easier for the guides to handle the door, and each member of the party ran through In turn as the door opened. The cave Itself Is a wonderful place. The guides have explored 2,000 rooms, covering a lineal distance of ninety miles, but tbey say that the extent of the cave Is not yet known. Forty miles north of the entrance Is another and almost equally beautiful cavern called Crystal cave. The guides believe that some day It will be found that one Is a continuation of the other. Some parts of the Wind cave are 3,000 feet below the surface of the earth. All kinds of weird and beauti ful effects are gained by burning lights within one or another of the rooms. Stalactites cover walls and ceilings in many of the caverns, and the cave Is full enough of terrors and delights to satisfy the most exacting cave hunter. PATRONIZING. When the Gods l'leane Him the Chinese Emperor Grants Them Promotion. Like many official papers of Euro pean courts, the Pekin Gazette an nounces all acts of State aud ceremo nial proceedings of the national gov ernment; but in one particular It Is unique among court circulars, for Its habit Is publicly to commend and com pliment the State gods when the em peror is satisfied that they have done they full duty toward Chinamen. When some particular god distinguishes him self by an extraordinary service, his rank among the gods is raised by Im perial command. Not long ago the department of the God of War was Increased In Import ance by reason of the great armaments which the government undertook to support, so after he had shown bis benevolence by allowing the Imperial troops to defeat a body of rebels, he was metaphorically patted on the back and raised to the same rank as Con fucius, who bad hitherto held the first place In the State Pantheon. A few years ago the following an nouncement appeared In the Gazette: "The governor-general of the Yellow River requests that a tablet be put up to the River God. During the trans mission of relief rice to Honan, when ever difficulties were encountered through shallows, wind and rain, the River God Interposed in the .most un mistakable manner, so that the trans port of grain went on without hin drance. "Order! Let the proper office pre pare a tablet for the temple of the Riv er God." "A memorial tablet," says another Gazette, "Is granted to two temples Iu honor of the God of the Locusts. On the last appearance of locusts, last sum mer, prayers were offered to this deity with marked success." HOUR GLASSES IN DEMAND. Many Purposes for Which They Are Superior to Watch;, "Most people think that hour glasses went out of style years ago," said a clerk in a Twenty-third street store, "along with perukes and knee breeches, but as a matter of fact we have more calls for them to-day than we have had at any time within the last ten years. That this renewed popularity of the hour glass augurs its universal acceptance as a timepiece by the com ing generation I am not prepared to say, but If such a renaissance were to become assured It would be no more surprising than some of the other re cent fads based on a revival of lost customs. Anyway, a brief study of the hour glass will do nobody harm. There are thousands in this generation who have not the slightest Idea what an hour glass looks like, and It won't hurt them to broaden their education a lit tle along certain lines. "Of the'hour glasses sold at present the three-minute glass Is In the lead. This glass Is use! almost exclusively to measure time In boiling eggs and Its usefulness naturally places Its sales a little In advance of the more senti mental varieties. Next come the five, ten and fifteen-minute and full-bour glasses, which are bonght chiefly by musicians for piano practice, and by lodges and secret societies. "The sand used in an hour glass Is the very finest that the world affords. The western coast of Italy furnishes most of It. as It has done for ages past The cost of hour glasses is regulated by the ornamentation of the rranies. A glass set In a plain rosewood case can be bought for f 1, while a mahog any frame comes to 11.50 or $2. Of course, the price can be brought Bp still higher by fancy carving and decora tloa. Swell ledges sometimes g? to ESKIMOS POIND. v- - 1 I mwmn satisfied with the cheaper grades." .cw iorK sun. ATCHINSON GLOBE SIGHTS. Comments on Every Day Hattera By an Orimnul Genins. The less a man knows, the greater the subjects he tries to discuss. An old man's idea of a good time Is to get an unbroken night's rest. When a loafer does go to work he expects everyoue to sympathize with him. A promising young man is one who pays attention to the advice of older men. Have you ever noticed how some girls go visiting aud stay, and stay, and stay? As soon as a man gets In the poor house he begins thinking of getting married. So many women Indulge In cheap dramatics; in a sort of ten, twenty aud thirty show. When an old man goes to see a young girl, he begins by telling her how much life Insurance he carries. The Atchison girls are pointing with pride to one of their number: A man came a thousand miles to propose to her. A woman puts on a thousand little things to make herself look pretty, and then gets mad If a man looks at her ad miringly. When a man has a cold, his old fash ioned friends complain thnt the day and generation do not pay enough re spects to the onion.' When a woman appears In a new hat or new cloak, Ihere Is a suppressed scream from the other women of, "I don't see how she can afford It!" When a man complains of the bills for the children's shoes, all the sympa thy he gets from his wife Is that he ought to be thankful that the children are able to wear out shoes. Atchison girls who have studied palmistry, and who read the lines In the woman's hands, say thnt it pleases the average married woman to bo told that she will be married twice. When a girl gets to be twenty-five she gets up an afternoon club. Why? Because the boys have shelved her for something younger. All the women who belong to afternoon clubs have been shelved. Soaring; the Shepherds. There Is au Irrepressible satisfaction in finding that a great philosopher Is, In the Innocent ways of life, very much like other men. Marcus Aurellus Au tonius, whose "Meditations" have been the guide of thinkers for centuries, wrote some exceedingly human letters to his teacher and friend, Marcus Cor uellus Fronto. One of them contains the following spiee of boyish fun: When my father returned home from the vineyards, I mounted my horse, a usual, aud rode ou ahead some little wav. Well, there on the road was a herd of sheep standing all crowded together, as If the place was a desert, with four dogs and two shepherds, but nothing else. Then one shepherd said to another shepherd, on seeing a num ber of horsemen: "I say, look you at those horsemen! They do a deal of robbery." When I heard this, I clap spurs to my horse and ride straight for the sheep, In consternation the sheep scatter, Hither aud thither they are fleeting and bleating. A shepherd throws his fork. and the fork falls on the horseman who comes next to me. We make our es cape. Costly Experiment. Sir Hiram Maxim, the Maine man whose Immense fortune and more re cently his knighthood came from the Invention of the rapid-fire gun which bears his name, has never lost his Yan kee quick wit and readiness to cope with a difficult situation. That charac teristic appeared very clearly iu the first government test of bis gun. The rapid-fire weapou, then a novelty was offered for test In the presence of a number of military experts und government officials. The Inventor was asked to have 10, 000 rounds fired at the greatest pos sible speed. This was readily done, but the experts were still unsatisfied. "Can you guarantee," ine of them asked Maxim, "that your gnu would go on firing automatically for twenty-four hours V "Certainly," nnswered Maxim, quiet ly, "on .one condition." "What Is that?" "That the government shall pay for the ammunition used." This seemed reasonable, but when the experts figured It out that the twenty four hours' test would take over NV 000 cartridges, and Ibat the cost would be about 'iS.0C4. they maguanlmously withdrew their request. "If I were left a million," said a girl to her steady to-dty, "I would give you half." "I think. tinder the circum stances." he replied, "that you ought to say thrt you would give It all to me." Keep your friendships out of a atom If you don't want to be distressed tj them shrink. GEO. P. CROVELL, Succfwior lo E. L. Smith, Oldest Established House tu the valley. DEALER IN Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Hardware, Flour and Feed, etc. Thin nid-onulilialieil bouse will con tinue to pay cash (or all its goods; it pays no rent; it employs a clerk, but dries tint. hnvA in divide with a nartner. All dividends are made with customers in the way of reasonable prices. Davenport Bros. Are running their two mills, pinner and box factory, aud can till or Jen (or Lumber Boxes, Wood and Posts ON SHORT NOTICE. DAVIDSON FRUIT CO. ' stiiprKtiS or HOOD RIVER'S FAMOUS FRUITS. PACKERS OP THE Hood River Brand of Canned Fruits. MANVFACTVRKRS OP Boxes and Fruit Packages DEALERS IN Fertilizers & Agricultural Implements THE REGULATOR LINE. Dalles, Portland & Astoria Navigation Co. DALLES BOAT Leaves Oak Street Dock, Portland 7 A. M. PORTLAND BOAT Leaves Dalles 7 A. M. Daily Ex cept Sunday. STEAMERS Regulator, Dalles City, Reliance. WHITE COLLAR LINE. TheDalles-Portland Route Sir. " Tahoma," Between Portland, Th Pallet and Way Points TIMS CARD Loaves Portland Tuesdays, Thnridayi nd Hmurdaysat 7 a. m. Arrive The Dalles, a,m'! day. & p. ni. leaves The Dalles Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 7 a. in. Arrives i'ortlaua.sauie day, 4 p. m. This route has the grandest scenic attractions on earth. Sir. "Bailey Gatzert," Jjaily Konud Trip!, except Sunday. TIME CARD. Leave Portland. . 7 a.m. I Leavo Astoria.....? a.m. Landing and ofhee, foot of Alder street. Koth 'phones, Alain 8.M, l'ortland, Or. E. W. CKIf'HTON, Aitent, Portland. JOHN M. K1I.LOON, AKent. The Dalles. A. J. TA YLOK, AKnut, Astoria. .1. C. WYATT, ui tit, Vancouver. WOI.KOH1) A WVKItS, Akis., White f-atmon. K. 11. UlLlilitTH, Acent, I.yle, Wash. ' PRATHER & BARNES, Agonts at Hood Kiver Oregon Siiohj line and union Pacific ;Bnlt Lake, Denver, Chlcatro Ft. W orth, Omaha, Portland special Kansas City, Ht. Kpeclkt 11:25a.m. Ixuis,Chicugoand 2:06p.m. Last. Walla Walla Lewls- BpoVan ton,8pokana,Min- Portland. Flyer ncapolts.Ht. Paul, Fiyer 1:27 p.m. Dultith. Militau- 4:3ua.u. kee.CbtcagoJtEajt Fait lake, Denver, Mall and Ft. Wurth.Omaha, Mall and Express Kaunas City, Ht. KxpreKa ll;42p. m. I.ouis,Chlcattuaud 6.42a.m. East. OCEAN AND RIVER SCHEDULE FltOH POKTLAMl. .-00p.m. All sailing dates 4:00 p.m. subject to change For Pan Franci.ro bail every i daya ' Dally Colombia gt 4 00 p. m. Ex.NiuitlaT lleastert. Kx. Bunder s ou c m. Saturday To Astoria and Way Hew p. m. landings. iSam Willamette (tlver. :p. n. ax.buudar Oregon city, New. Ex. two. lay twrg, ifelein, Imle-l retiiienee ttajr ' andinga. 7:00 am. WlllaxHts arte Tan- : p. m. Tuee., Thur. km ll.ers. Hon., Wel aud Bmu and rrL Oreaon City, Day. on. Wa; Laud- luga. 45am. wnusMHe llrer. 40p.nt. Tue., Thar Mon.. We4. and Bat. Portland lo Corral. and FrL In Way Laud. iDg. Lv. Rlparla Ssaai Rivia. Lv.t.iatoa ::V. am. Riparia to Lewiiton tain. dally dally For tow rates and other Information write le A. L. CRAIG, General Paaeenger Ageut. Portland, 0t 1, BAG LET", agent. Hm4 Klvar.