IfeT THE CQMIKG MAN. "Thb Coming Man I sing : the Coming Maa Evolved In nature since the world began By Energy Divine ; the Man foretold rorevcrmore , whom Hope and Faith behold. All voices shall he tear , oil volumes read : Probe to the heart of every code and creed ; Cut uncut pages of Creation's book ; In life Itself lor life's deep secrets look ; Intent his heart and vtgilant his brain The seventh essence of the truth to gain. He shall be humble , jet supremely bold The scroll of Time's experience to unfold : Sf Where Science lifts her daring flambeau hlg He greets the glowing torch with fearless eye Where , past the known , Religion wing * he night His solemn gaze pursues her starry light Not knowledge only enters in the plan And consummation of. the Coming Man , And not belief alone , however true : The best is not to rest. It is to do ; Tho Coming Man shall be a man of deeds Employing substance and supplying needs. His wisest word shall bear a fitting act , And all his speculation bloom to fact ; The goodness of his ethics he shall prove PJ logical results of active love. W. H. Veiiabk , in The Currctd. * BROUGHT BACK. CHAPTER I. There was time , sinco I have beei a man , that I hardly knew my name , but I am pleased to say that I .knov now. I am John Pemebrton "Oaks , My father always called me Pern ; bu - that makes no difference , for mj father had nothing to do with the awful experience which I am going tc relate. At the ago of twentyrfive I was the trusted book-keeper for the large wholesale firm of Pigman & Gray. Pigman , who really carried on the business , made no attempt to disguise his appreciation of me. You know that I appreciated this , when I tell you that I was in love with Carrie Pigman. I first met her while I occu pied a "roustabout" position in the Btore , but even then she smiled upon me. She used to come to tho store nearly ever afternoon and it was not long until I began to eagerly watch for her. One day when she came in , her father was out Passing by every ono she approached me and said : "Mr. Pern , do you know where papa has gone ? " "No , I do not. " "Do you know how soon he will be back ? " "No. He said nothing to me about his going. When he has information to impart he communicates it to some ono occupying a higher position than the position 1 fill. " "Oh , yes , that is true , but I'll sit hero until ho comes , that is if you don't care. " "Of course , I do not care. You must please excuse me as I am compelled to go about my duties. " "Oh , no , stay here and talk to me , Mr. Pern. " "I really cannot. If I do , your father will give me a blowing up when ho comes back. " "Oh , no , he is not so bad as that. " "Ho is very strict. " "Not with anything that concerns > me. " "I can't help it , Miss Carrie , I must go about my duties. " She pouted in a most charming pre tense of anger as 1 turned away , and I was half inclined to return and talk to her , but knowing that my daily bread depended on my position , Ishut out tho bright picture. When Mr. Pigman returned , I heard her sav : "Papa , Mr. Pern is 'such a stubborn young man , " "Why do you think so , CarrieP" "Because I asked him to'talk to me and he said that he was compelled to do his work. " "He acted rightly , my daughter , and I respect him for it. " "But 1 was lonesome. " "That makes no difference. The young man has duties to perform , du ties with which I havo entrusted him and any neglect on his part would prove him to be unworthy of my con fidence. " These declarations made me addi tionally careful , in tho future , and it was not very long until I was promoted to the position of head book-keeper. Ono afternoon , Mr. Pigman invited me to take dinner with him at his house. It was the first time that he r had ever extended such an invitation , and the eagerness with which I ac cepted it must have been ill disguised , for Mr. Pigman looked at me and smiled. Carrie was radiant and Mrs. Pigman whom I had never before seen , beamed upon me a cordial welcome. After dinner we had music , and when evening came , Carrie and I went to the theatre. How joyous she was ; how .1 light-hearted and gay. 1 loved her and I could see that she loved me. Indeed , she made no attempt to conceal it. As we were going home I told her of my love asked her to marry me. ' We kissed each other at the gate. The next morning I was much sur prised and not a little embarrassed when Mr. Pigman said to me : "So and Carrie " you are engaged ? , "Yes , sir , " I faltered. "Well , sir , she will make you a good wife. Havo you drawn off the Halpin Brothers' account ? " I looked wonderingly at him. Sure ly he could not be so unconcerned. "Yes , sir , I have drawn off the ac count. " "All right" "Mr. Pigman , you do not seem to be much concerned about our engage ment. " "Whose engagement ? " "Your daughter's mine. " "Oh , that's a fact ! " ho replied. "I had almost forgotten it. " "Mr. Pigman , you treat it as a very light matter. " "Oh , no ; can't be light. You are a pretty heavy fellow and Carrio is no dwarf. If 1 had any objections to of fer , you would hear from me , but as I know you to be capable andT honest , I gladly give my consent' * CHAPTER U. I was a voracious reuder of newspa pers. Although my mind fondly dwelled upon my love affair , yet I did not neglect my newspapers. 'Humor ous items , clipped without credit , pos sessed for me an especial fascination. One day while I was walking along the street , it suddenly occurred tome that the majority of men were with out credit , and I thought it would be right to compel foreigners to display their credits. For instance , on the tail ot a Gorman's coat should b < printed the word "Germany , " and it like manner all other foreigners shoulc be treated. The American should b < leaded out as original matter. Ii made me mad to think of the numer ous foreigners who were leading them selves out , parading as original mat ter. I passed Pigman's house ant saw Carrie standing on the steps , bul I did not speak to her. I was toe busy thinking of my newspaper idea , I met a young fellow whom 1 knew tc bo of foreign extraction. He wat strutting as original matter. I stop ped hinf and remonstrated with him. "Sir , " said I , "you ought to wear z credit on your coat-tail ? " "What's the matter with you ? ? ' "I'm all right ; I'm original and have a right to bo leaded out. " "You are either drunk or crazy , " he said. Then I raved. I told him that he had insulted an American paragraph and I wanted to fight him , but a po liceman came up and separated us. I went to the store and began work on my books. Mr. Pigman , I noticed regarded mo curiously. After a while ho came to mo and said : "Oaks , what is the matter with J ° un * * ? & zs s "Nothing , why ? " "On your books I noticed the words 'leaded out , ' and 'solid. ' What do you mean ? " "I tried to explain to him but he could not understand. I told him that ho was original and had a perfect right to be leaded out but that the Ir ish porter ought to be solid and cred ited. "If you don't know where ho came from , " said I "you'd better credit him to exchange. " : Still he did not understand. His obtuscness angered me , and seizing a poker I was about to strike him when the uncredited Irisman rushed in and disarmed me. Then there camo a darkness through which I could scarce ly see. Tho sunbeams on the window- sill fell like shadows. I lost my rec ollection. When I regained it , I was in a sort of prison. The light had re turned but my mind was still dis turbed , Carrio appeared at the gra ted door. "Hello , Carrie , " said I. "Oh , I am so glad you know me , " she rejoined , pressing her face against the bars. "Know you , why I have known you let me see I have known you eighty- seven years. " "Oh , Mr. Pern. " "It's a fact. I wouldn't tell you alie. I got acquainted with you eighty-seven years ago tho first of last June and tho last of July. " , How strange it is that I should remember all these foolish things , but I do ; I remember them clearly. "Mr. Pern , are you never go ing to get well ? You havo been in this asylum two years. Oh , if jrou hadn't gone insane wo would have been married. " I laughed at her. "Married , " I ex claimed , "why we were married forty- six years ago. " She burst into tears. "You are hopelessly gone , " she said " 1 fear that you will never be brought back. " "Oh , I'll get it straightened out after awhile. The credit system is improving. I saw an odd look ing fellow yesterday , that was credited to exchange. A few weeks ago he would havo been run in aa original. Tho ready print fellows are doing the square thing. So don't fret" She wept for joy , I thought , and when sho had gone , I sat down and congratulated myself up on the prosperous , condition of the country press. It may have been months but it only seamed to be a few min utes , when I looked up and saw Mr. Pigman. "How are you getting along ? " ho asked. "First rate , " said I. "Does your mind seem to be getting any clearer ? " "My mind is as clear as a bell , sir. It is as clear as tho Arkansaw sun shine and as strong as mountain moon shine. " Pigman sighed. "I earnestly hope that you may be brought back , but I do not see much chance. I have sent for several leading doctors. Thev may save you. " Four doctors , wise looking old fellows , camo and examined me. It was fun for me. They tick- Jed me nearly to death. They undoubt edly said something to Pigman , for shortly afterward ho came around and said : "The doctors say that your case is hopeless. " "All right , I'll take beer. " "They say that you onco had a very strong mind , but that it is entirely gone , or that is , hopelessly shattered. " "Give me a little straight. " "They declare that your case is a remarkable one , and adviso your friends to como around and talk to you. " "All right , help yourself. " "Carrie will be around in a dav or two. " "All right ; tell her that as soon , as I collect my occupation tax from the citv council I will pay her for washino- ° those six shirts. " "Poor fellow ! " "Yes , haven't a cent at present. " The next moment though it may have been longer i looked up and saw Carrie looking at jtne. "How's crops ? I asked. "Oh , Mr. Pern , will you never be brought back , when you know that I love you so ? " "Yes , I'll be there directly. Unlock that door and I'll present you with the hnest foot-race you ever saw. Oh , I'm & jack-rabbit when Eturu myself loose. I onco ran from Kansas to prohibi tion. " "I don't know what to do , " she sobbed. "Unlock the door. Say , a fellow came in here yesterday with a coffin on his arm. I am in favor of the Rus sian idea. I like beautiful coffins. There is nothing prettier than a speckled 3offinf It may not last as long as the black ones but it is more attractive. " "Do you over read anything ? " she isked. "No , the people who keep thl boarding house won't let me read. " "They are cruel. Hero is a news paper. " She shoved the newspaper thougl the bars and I took it up. Carrie with drew. I unfolded the paper. With i thrill I read the following dispatcl from Now York : "A peculiar epidemic is raging it " the east. The man who started" th < mother-in-law joke has just died anc the disease is spreading rapidly amonf the paragraphers. It is thought thai they will all die. " A dark cloud was lifted from mj mind. I throw down my paper anc uttered a cry of joy. I realized it all. I had been crazy. The keeper , hear- my cry , rushed to my cell. "A glance satisfied him. Unlocking the lieavj door , he said. "You are free. " I hurried down stairs. How bright everything was. My first thought was of Carrie , but not wishing to shock her , I hastened to her father's store. The old gentleman was sitting in the business office. When I entered he sprang to his feet as though he would run away , but seeing my altered ex pression of countenance , he threw his arms around mo nd wept. "Brought bask , brought back ! " he said , over and over again. . When we were seated , 1 explained the cause of my sudden cure. "Well , sir , " said he , "when Carrie found that dispatch , the other morn ing , she spoko of what a wonderful in fluence it might have on yon , and she asked the advice of a physician , who said that it might bo too great a shock to you , but agreed that it would either kill or cure you. She said that she would rather see you dead than to know that you would always be crazy. " "Bless her , " I exclaimed. "Lot us hurry to the house. " Carrio was almost delirious wit'a joy , and tho old lady dropped many tears of gladness. The next day I resumed charge of the books. My mind was so clear that I could anticipate sales several weeks in advance. One month from tho time I was brought back , Carrie and I were married. Among the gifts was one that we prized above all estimate. It was a silver tea pot on which , skill fully engraved , appeared tho dispatch from Now York. Tho next day after tho marriage.Mr. Pigman came to mo and said : "I have need of a partner. Half of my extensive establishment is yours. I was-very happy , and am still in that state. Every time I take my tea and I take it very often I read that blessed dispatch. Opie P. Head , in drkansaw Traveler. Purirying1 Water With Alum. Those of our readers who have traveled on the Mississippi river know how turbid the water is , and they may have seen people tie a bit of alum to a thread , let it down into a tumbler of water , and swing it about a little , af ter which operation the liquid be comes as clear as crystal. Recently the matter has boon carefully exam ined into and reported upon by Profs. P. T. Austen and F. A. Wilder , of Rutgers college. In their experiments , two-tenths of a grain to the" liter ( ono and one-fifths grains to the gallon ) caused the settling of the impurities in the New Brunswick , N. J. , watei' . Double this quantity may well be used , as a rule. This amount of alum is too small to be perceptible to the taste , or to exert any physiological action. The alumun may be used in clarifying water by filtration. If a very small amount bo added to turbid water it can bo filtered through ordinary pa per without difficulty , and yields' a brilliantly clear filtrate , in. which there is no trace of suspended matter. It is not necessary to let it stand before fil tration , as tho action of the alum is immediate. The simulest form of fil ter for considerable quantities of wat er is a tube , ono end of which is stuffed with cotton. A drain-pipe is'the best , as it can bo so easily cleansed. The plug of cotton should be two or three inches thick , and may be kept in place by a rino of wood fitted into the bot tom of the pipe. For household pur poses , a glass funnel may be used , or a filter may be made by cutting off the bottom of a glass flask or other bot tle. The neck of tho funnel or bottle is to bo plugged with cotton , which should first be worked in warm water to remove the adhering air , and to wet it well. It should bo packed in anito closely , a little at a time , until it forms a layer two or three inches thick. To insure accuracy in the amount of alum used it is bests to make a solution of half an ounce of alum to a quart of water. Dissolve the alum in a cup of boiling water , pour this into a quart measure , and fill up with cold water. Keep in a properly labeled bottle. Fifty-four drops of this solution , or a scant tea- spoonful will contain two and three- tenths grains of alum , which is the quantity for a gallon of water. It is not important to bo very exact , as twice tho quantity would bo harmless enough. Analysis shows that tho water is not only clarified but purified by this process , the greaterpart of the organic matter being removed from it. Popular Science News. tfo Choice Where There Was Copper. "There was a curious feature of tho outbreak of cholera in 1849 that has act been referred to in recent years , " i physician said recently. "It was observed that no workmen engaged in : opper mines or in manufacturing any sort of article out of copper , or in handling copper ore was afflicted with sholera. . M. Andrand demonstrated that there was much less electricity in the air in those parts of Paris where the cholera raged most fearfully than n the other parts of the city. The two liscoveries were put together , and it ivas inferred that the galvanic action generated by the copper acted as a preventative. It may bo that the cop- Der absorbed into ttie system of the ivorkmen served as an antidote. At iny rate , the action of copper in alie nating some kind of cramps is well mown , and there will be no harm in rearing strips of clean copper or of sopper and zinc next to the bodv , as las been recommended bv the English physician. " New York Sun. FACT AND FANCY : Cackling hens are of great value i boarding house yards. They lead th boarders to believe his breakfast eg are freshly laid. * One of tho most wonderful facts c the present aere is tho way actors cor tinue to remain "young America : tragedians" until they are past 90. It is said that Jay Gould dislike railroad traveling. Perhaps he i afraid of being drowned. Ho we ! knows the amount of water on th roads. A man can get gloriously drunk i Japan for 20 cents. This is why th Japanese who come to America sav their money and lake it homo wit them. Instructor in Rhetoric Give an ea ample of a syllogism. Logical Fresh man All men are more or less alike I am a man ; therefore I am more o less alike. "Terrible railroad accident yestei day , wasn't it ? " "Hadn't heard of it what was "it ? " "Tho X road , yoi know it ? " "Yes , well ? " "It paid i dividend. " The aim of Chinese parents is to s < tutor their boys that if ono of then happens to sit down on an eight-ounci tack in the presence of company hi won't even bob up. Tbere are only two occasions when a-man finds out what an atrocious vil lian ho is. The first is when he rum for the aldermanship of his ward , am the second is when his wife sues hin for divorce. "I have never given you credit fo knowing very much , madam , " said i blunt old bachelor , "but " "Sir,1 she interrupted , "do yon wish to in suit " "But , " he continued , " . have always admired your grace anc beauty. " "I accept your apology , ' said the lady. Frenchman ( to Kentucky citizen ) "Von zo friend ask you ze invite t < take zp drink viskey , vat yon say it Anglais ? " Kentucky Citizen "Don' care if I do. " "Doncar fido , oui ! Bu ven you refuse zo invite , zen vat yoi say in Anglais ? " "Well or I guesi you've got me now , Frenchy. " "My dear , " said a frightened hus band in the middle of the night shak ing his wife , "where did you put thai bottle of strychnine ? " "On tho shelf next to tho peppermint. " " 0 , Lord ! ' ho graoned , "I've swallowed it. ' "Well , for goodness' sake , " whisper ed his wife , "keep quiet. or you'l wake tho baby. " Did your story win the prize ? " "No but it came near winning it. It fail ed only in one stipulation. " "Ant what was that ? " "It was to have the editor's hair stand on end. " "Oh , ] see. It wasn't exciting enough. " "Yes , it was. " "Then why didnrt it make tho editor's hair stand on end ? " "He hadn't anv. He was bald-head ed. " At an evening party Dumley was in troduced to a young lady , and after f remark about tho weather he said , gallantly : "And havo I really the pleasure of meeting the beautiful Miss Smith , whoso praises are being sounded by everybody ? " "Oh , no , Mr. Dumley , " tho lady replied ; "the beautiful Miss Smith to whom you re fer is a cousin of mine. " "Oh. that's it. Well , I thought there must be a mistake somewhere , " said tho gallanl Dumley. A Fellow to be Trusted "What do you think of Bliffkins , Brown ? " "Pretty fair sort of a chap in his wav , I believe. " "Do you know him well ? " "Oh , yes ; I am ver.r well acquainted with him , indeed. " "And you con sider him a man to be trusted ? " "No doubt of it. " "What do you base your opinion upon ? " "Personal ex perience. " "How's that ? " "Well , I began trusting Bliffkins shortly after I b'ecame acquainted with him , and I am trusting him still. " Gentleman I am sorry to learn of ' your wife's death , Uncle'Rastus. Un cle Rrastus Sah ? Gentleman I say that I am sorry to hear that your wife has recently died. Uncle Rastus ( with a puzzled look ) I giss da' am some mistake 'bout dat , Mistah Brown. 1 lef de olo ooman in gud health dis mawnin' , sah. Who said she wah dead ? . Gentleman I've forgotten now. Uncle Rastus ( his face clearing up ) Oh , ya'as , now I understand , sah. Dat wuz er formah wife ob mine , Mistah Brown. She died mo'n foah weeks ago. Do present incumbent am all right. Littlo Ernest , a small boy recently emancipated from kilts , walked into tho nursery ono morning and was quite disgusted upon finding that it had not been put in order'for the day one of the rules of tho house being that no playthings should be brought out until the swooping was done. Ho left the room for a short time , and finding matters no better on his return exclaimed , impatiently : "Well , hasn't this room beensweepedyet ? " "Why , Ernest , " said his mother , "do you think that is good grammer ? " "Oh well , then , " said he , "has it been swopen ? " In an Arkansas town , several nights ago , a mob , led by a desperate man , marched to tho jail , dragged a mur derer from tho cell , and hurried with him to tho outskirts of the town. Each man wore an expression of de termination features hardened by iwful resolve. The prisoner attempt- 3d.to speak , to beg for his life , but the burly hands closed around his throat , ind the prayer he would have uttered tvent out in an inarticulate gurgle. When the infuriated men reached a iarge oak they halted. Ono of them : hrow a ropo over a limb. "Gentle- Hen , " said tho prisoner , "please give no a chanceto say a word. " "Be juick about it , " some one shouted. ' 'Gentlemen , I admit that the evidence s against me , but , as truly as we stand here , 1 killed that man in self- iefense. " "Killed what man ? " was isked. "Bill Bottleford. " "You lin't the man that killed Bottleford , ire you ? " "Yes , unfortunately , I am ; he man. " "Men , " shouted the lead- ; r , "we have come within one of mak- ng a terrible mistake. " Then tuni ng to the prisoner the loader added : W thought , sir , that you were the nan that stole Nat Boyd's fish-trap. 3op down offen the box. You &ra : ree. " LONG-LIVED PEOPLE. Features of a Classified Record of Ten Hot sand Centenarians. Joseph E. Perkins , a newsdealer c this city , writes a Syracuse correspon dent to The New York Tribune , is abou to publish a book entitled "Tfc Encyclopedia , of Human Longevity , ' which is the result of thirty-eigh years of investigation on his part. .Th book will contain an authentic recor < of a large number of people , men ant women , " who have attained the" age o 100 years or more. Tho only excop tion to this is tho case of a man wfii died at tho age of 99 years and 86- days , and whom Mr. Pe'rkins regard , as virtually a centenarian. The boot will represent an immense amount o ; labor and research , and its author be lieves that it may bo relied on as ac curate in every instance. "I havesaid Mr. Perkins , speaking of his book , "more than 10,000 in stances of people wno havo lived 10 ( years and"more. . Those names hav < been gathered from every part of th < globe. ' This country leads in longevi ty , and Connecticut is at the fron among the United States. In tha state i havo gathered statistics in re gard to more than 6,000 persons whc were more than 80 years of age , anc of this number 20 were beyond the century limit. As regards sex tht majority of these 10,000 centenarians were women. I account for this bj the fact , that they lead less irregulai lives than men. I have instances ol 50 old maids who come up to ray cen tury standard , and only 12 bachelors. As regards occupation 1 find that sail ors , soldiers , and farmers are the longest lived. Among tho professions I have the instances of 100 ministers who lived to 100 years and more , while I could find only 80 doctors , 10 law yers , and 10 actors who came up tc tho standard. I can find no case among my 10,000 of a newspaper man who has lived to'be 100 years old. Newspaper men do so much brain wprk that they die young. " Coming to special instances , Mr. Perkins added : "Among tho oldest people in the United Stales were Flora Thompson , anegressofNashua , N. C. , who died at tho age of 150 years ; Betsy Frautham , a native of Germany , who died in Tenneasee at tho age of 154 vears , and Sins , a slave , who died in Virginia , 180 years old. I havo the cases of ten persons who lived in safe ty for one hundred years and then burned to death. In Onondaga coun ty I havo the sketches of fifty centena rians. Among them is Rev. Daniel Waldo , who died in 1964 at the ago of nearly 102 yetrs. : For more than sixty years he was a clergyman in the Presbyterian church , and on the an niversary of his 100th birthday ho preached a sermon in the First Presby terian church of Syracuse. The last six pensioners of the Revolutionary war were centenarians , and I havo their photographs. Then there was John Weeks , of New London , Conn. , who married his tenth wife when he was 106 years ot age and she onlyl6. He died at tho age of 114. His gray hairs had fallen oft * and they were re " newed by a dark growth" hair. Several new teeth had also made their appearance , and a few hours before bis death he ate three pounds of pork , two or three pounds of bread , and drank a pint of wine. Nicholas Schathcowski , of Posen , was another old fellow. He deposed on odth be fore the council of Constance , A. D. 1414 , that he was 150 years of age , and ' that his father , whose'age at the time of his death was nearly 200 , could re member tho death of the first king of Poland , A. D. 1025. Among the oddi ties to be found in my book will be the photograph of a man who died at the age of 121 years. He had 144 children , grandchildren and great-grandchild- en , and outlived them all. Then ; hcre was Margaret McDowal , of Edin burgh , who died at the age of 106. " she"married and survived thirteen msbands. John Rovin and his wife , of Hungary , lived together as man an wife for 148 years. Ho was 164 and she 172 at tho time they died , and ; heir youngest son was 116 years old when his parents died. "There is tho case of a man who married sixteen times and had no children. This case is off-set by that of another centenarian who had forty- nine children. John Riva , an eis- change-broker of Italy , lived to the ige of 116 years , and had a child born to Jura atter he was 100 years old , Betz , a Sioux squaw , who died a little while ago , lived for moro than 100 years. She had been the wife in turn of an army officer , xu Indian chief , a bor der "cavalryman , and a Methodist minister. William Ward , of Westches- ter county , died in 1778 at the age of 107. He was a member of the Ward family who were among tho earliest settlers in Westchester county , and the particulars of his lifo and death were given in the New York papers of the time. His brother John was a magistrate , and attended court in While Plains as late as 1773. 'William Ward , a member of this family , car ried on business as a banker in 1883 at No. 52 Broadway , New York. An other queer incident is that of a cen tenarian who was married four times and had a daughter by each wife. These daughters married , and each of them had fourteen children. Then there was a man who went over the century line and had twenty-two child ren. His first was a boy , and girls and boys came after that in regular rotation. There was a person known as Elizabeth Page , who lived in Lon don and died at the age of 108 years. This person had acted as a midwife , und was supposed to bo a woman. After death , however , it was discover ed that the supposed woman was a man. The book will contain three hundred illustrations. " Cajeme , the Yaqui Chief. While the world is wondering at the singular success which has placed El Mehdi on the barbaric throne ol the Soudan , Mexico has apparently found her mehdi in tho person of Jose Marie Cajome , who holds a scepter of terror aver Sonora as the Mohammedan ihieftain does over the Soudan. Ca jeme , chief of tho Yaqui and Moyo Indians , was born in 1842 , in the tiny town of Tonn , on the banks of tho silent Yaqui river , which creeps to the Pacific from Sonora's heart of forests. If. His parents were Pantaleon Leiva Ca- jema and Hilarla Buitcmea , the latter , his mother , being known yet through that country as tho Sibyl. The bap- tismal waters of Catholicism from tho hands of an adventurous Italian mis sionary. Father Romanani , rested on his head when a boy in the town of Navajoa. From earliest boyhood Ca- jemotook to tho chase , andjrofttsed to work on a farm when ho could scour tho deer forests with his bow and arrows. When 18 years of ago ho ran away from homo , and from that day his life was a constant , rest less march , a bohemian existence. Ho entered the service of Mr. J. R. Bourse , an America miner at Alamos , a town on the projected Alamos and Mazantlan railroad. Wine and women soon drew their chains about him , and fired by jealousy and drink ho drew his first human blood by stabbing Abraham Jbllman. who was Mr. Brouse's steward. lie then fled. In 1872 , when the governor of Sono- ra , Ignacio Pesquen , started out to assist tho governor of the neighboring state of Sinaloa against tho revolution headed by tho bloody Marquez , Cajo- me joined the state troops. During tho campaign he gave proofs of great valor and of uncommon military skill , and was made a colonel in tho Mexi can army. . During leisure moments of the campaign he learned to read and write , for as he never would go to schoolho did not oven know tho alpha bet when he entered on this exciting period of his life. When peace was estab lishcd Cajemo returned to his homo , preceded by an uncommon fame. At that time Julio Moroyoqui , nicknamed thd Jaguar , ruled tho Yaquis. Ho was one of the most sanguinary caci- qes of Mexican history , and known as the American Nero. Moroyoqui con firmed tho rank of colonel earned by Cajeme in the government army , and the latter soon bent his extraordinary talents to repressing disorders in tho government of tho lormor. Littlo by little Cajeme acquired popularity , and the Indian cauips soon became too narrow a theater for two such men. One day Cajemo with ten picked men surrounded the palace of the Jaguar , and going in assassinated niin , and was immediately proclaimed bis successor , a place ho has sinco held. held.While While in Nava'ao ho solicited in marriage the hand cf a dark-eyed belle of that'town , tho daughter of a rich planter. His suit refused , Cajemo "retreatud in good order , " and went back to the Yaqui river , thinking that time would ameliorate his suffering. Afterward he made up his mind toseo the girl , Juaua Narvaez , and lie start ed on a dark night and in disguise to visit her. On the way he was ambush ed by R. J. Castro.abrother chief , who was his rival for the possession of this Mexican Helen. Cajemo proved to bo a successful Paris. Single-handed ho killed Castro and three of his men , be sides wounding another , and arrived , bleeding fronfseveral wounds , at the feet of Juana Narvaez. She lied from . her homo in his company. Sinco that time Cajeme has led a fugitive life , " with his band of Indian warriors , and has defied the power of the Mexican republic , among tho mountains and marshes of bonora. Cajeme is well built , has herculean muscles , regular feature with a savage air impressed upon them , and has a brusque , abrupt manner. Ho is a splendid horseman ; has saved his lifo on several occasions by his lleet run ning and excellent swimming quali ties. He has an unconquerable will , a presence of mind which never deserts hima courage which borders on temerity. City of Mexico Two Jtepub- lies. Baby Won't Go. "Doctor , " he began , as he enter ed the ollice of a well-known medical nian the other day , "we've been talk ing it over. " "Ah ! " "And have concluded that it would be best for the b-iby's health - to go to the country this summer. " "I see. " "What do you thing cf it1 * "At a relative's , I suppose ? " "Yes. " "K amp anywhere near the house ? " 'Well , I believe there's one about a quarter of a mile awav. " " "That's good. Is "the well in tho woodshed ? " "It is. " ; "Good again. That will keep tho floor damp and muddy. Is tho cellar concreted and drained ? " "I think not. " "That's elegant A collar with a natural earth bottom can always bo depended on for sour smells , and one without a drain helps along fever. Lots of shrubbery around ? " "Oh , yes ; you can hardly see the house in summer. " "Exactly. That keeps roofs and walls damp , and you can depend on malaria. Pig-sty and barn handy to tho back door ? " "Yes , only a few rods away. " "Very nice verjYou can rely on the odors , and perhaps tho well water is improved by the percolations. Ever notice the cistern ? " "Yes , it is a nice wooden one. " "Splendid ! The water is always throwing oil"a sour smell , and some thing less than a million mosquitoes breed there every summer's mVht. I igree with you to a dot , especially if here are any box-drains around to breed typhoid'fever. " \ "You wouldn't adviso it ? " queered : he father. . j "Say ! " said the doctor , as he leaned > yer the table , "let tho nurse drop lim out of tho window Diish him lown the back stairs get him run > ver by an ice wagon give him your evo'Iver to plav with. There's a dozen ' vays of killing'lum off besides taking lim to the country , and any one ot hem will save you time and money. " -St. Paul Globe. Theodore Roosevelt Las published a Look ailed "Hunting Trips of a Ranchman. " The dition is limited to 500 copies , and is sold at ! 5 per copy. A collector of the curious announces that lary continues the favorite name for eirls , Inna comes second , Elizabeth la third. Laura a fourth.