i i yt -v MY PATRIOT BOY CATGIIT HIM BY THE TIIKOAT 1JWW twWlW t t v - fDld I tell you 0 friend of a proud sad day When my beautiful boy went marching away To a far away battle fleld When our countrys call was heard by me And all mothers whose sons were needed to fight 3Tor God and our country and the cause of right But my heart stood still and It seemed that a pall Wrapped me as the world is wrapped by the night And I thought as I wrought while the days went by And I prayed to my God whose throne Is on high Andwho careth for me to care for my boy -to bless our land and give us joy n the light of libertys sun then victory came but twas purchased dear The bells pealed oyt from far and near And I heard loud shouts ring in the air And the feet of men rush here and there I called aloud Is there news for me What news for me My tear dlmnied eyes can scarcely see And I heard for answer so like a knell It is well with your boy It Is well And then I knew my child no more Would come to me as in days of yore And thus the Father had answered my prayer By taking from earth to the home over there My darling child so brave so dear His sweet My mother Ill never more hear And yet twas a glorious death and he Died for tlie life of our dear country And your childrens children will peace enjoy Bought with the life of my precious boy WHERE THE BAT TLE WAS EOUGHT OLD tin your ri band my man The witness held up his left hand and the judge believing that he was defiant said with a show of anger Hold up your right hand and take the oath Again the left naud was raised and the judge turning to a deputy shouted Arrest that man for contempt of court He refuses to hold up his right hand Judge said the man a dilapidated specimen of humanity I cant hold up my right hand I left it at Gettysburg a good many years ago But I can swear all right Svith my loft hand Therejvas a sensation in court No one had noticed that the artificially stuff ed sleeve was tucked into the coat pocket at the wrist giving the figure that defiant air that haa aroused the anger of -the-pre-siding officer Now when they knew that no hand was there a thrill of sympathy ran through the crowd and the judge was visibly agitated and even apologized I did not know that you had been a soldier he said gently as if that fact were excuse enough for any lapse of duty on the present occasion I am a soldier yet said the man in the witness box once a soldier always a soldier is my creed Im under march ing orders and likely to join my regiment any time Its many years since I first went soldiering j was a likely chap then judge Yes yes said the judge who had been staring fixedly at the man while his face flushed and paled with some secret emotion but this is hardly the tiihe or place for reminiscences Your testimony in the case on hand is all that is required now 4Counsol for the defense will exam ine this witness and the judge turned to other business as if the subject no longer interested him But he had not done with it When he went out of the court house on his way home the oue armel soldier was waiting for him and he stopped with an impatient air to hear what he had to say It was evident that the man had been drinking and his general appearance was more down at the heels than before Judge he asked with tipsy gravity might your name be Shields Yes my name is Shields Have you any further business with me I am in something of a hurry Soni I Judge Shields Ive been wait ing over thirty years to ask you a ques tion and get an answer You dont hap pen to know me judge Xo came the low answer as the judge looked into the face of the soldier with a shifting earnestness taking in the whole figure in that uncertain way I dont tlsk I ever saw you before hiuk again my friend you are my -friend aint you did you ever know a young man a robust strapping fellow named Leonard Hurst My God man Leonard Hurst died during the war he was killed in the bat tle of Gettysburg and is buried up in yon der cemetery Is he Thats news to me Hiram Shields and its a lie He had a friend a young man like himself no not like him for Leonard Hurst would have given his life for that friend and thought it no sacrifice but the friend didnt enlist He staid at home and while Hurst was fight ing the enemy at the front Shields his f riend won his promised wife away from him married the girl Leonard Hurst had loved all his life Ill hear the story at another time said Shields who was in a panic of nerv ousness over this strange recital Youll hear it now retorted the other man swaying back and forth yet speak- ing with the utmost distinctness Leon ard Hurst went away with drums beat ing and flags flying and he was gone three years One of those years he spent in a Southern prison the fortune of war He came home a wreck to be nursed back to life and strength by those for whose sake he had suffered he came home to find himself a dead man The dry lips of the judge worked con vulsively but he said no word His friend had buried him A stone dit the foot of his grave had his name and number gathered from the prison hos pital He was dead and buried and his friend had married his sweetheart I You are excited said Shields finding his voice come home with me and You havent heard it all yet Maybe you thins it was hard to stand in front of a fire of shot and shell and be torn asunder by cannon balls Why man that was nothing to tliD soldier to what he suffered when he came home and found himself shut out of the ranks of living men read his own name on a gravestone and heard his friends talk of his death And thatwas nothing to the fact that the girl who swore fealty to him had married his false friend When he knew that the -bitterness of death had passed It was there his first anu last real battle was fifli THE SOLDIER LIFTED niS SHABBY CAP WITH KEVEKEXCE fought when he conquered himself and let the man live who had made earth a hell for him y Have youno pension asked the judge suddenly Pension Do they pension dead men The judge was trembling violently As the effects of tli2 liquor wore off the sol dier became more excitable and erratic lights flashed from his sunken eyes His whole expression was a menace to the man who stood trembling before him But when his strange companion with a sud den swjift motion caught him by the throat Shields made no resistance and the other holding him thus a moment threw him off contemptuously Tell me to my face I am dead sneer ed the soldier with livid lips you who robbed me of the dearest thing I had in life and of life itself Assassin She too is dead perhaps you killed her Hurst said Shields wiping the drops of ghastly fear from his pallid face if you are indeed a living man listen to me It may be some satisfaction to you to know that Mabel never loved me al though she was my wife She died with your name on her lips She believed you dead and kept your grave green with her tears Say that again cried the soldier Oh my God it pays to have been dead and buried all these years to know that after all she was true I had it in my mind to kill you yes I meant it when I had my hand at your throat but those words have saved you God will settle the ac count between us He has settled it answered Shields solemnly He closed the account when he refused me Mabels love when He took her from me as the worst punish ment He could inflict But I honestly be lieved that you were dead that it was your shattered form I brought from the battlefield and ouried up yonder That gave you a right to love Mabel Xo Shields hung his head in bitter grief and shame I I had tried to win her before that but she would not listen to me she never would have listened but for your death and Hurst that knowl edge killed her She was my wife in name but her heart was with you The soldier lifted his shabby cap with - TTt reverence lie raised his eyes to the blue canopy of heaven and his lips moved in prayer I have fought my last battle he said extending his one poor hand to Shields we are friends from this hour comrade You have called me comrade said Shields his eyes filling with tears I am no soldier but I know what that word means We are comrades for the rest of the march we will part no more From this hour my home is your home Thus it came about that these two be came to each other even as David and Jonathan united by a friendship surpass ing the love of woman Nor is the un known soldier who sleeps far from home and friends forgotten On each Memorial day flags wave and flowers blobm over his dust and a white haired man and a one armed soldier sit there to talk over the strange enigma of his last resting place Enough if on the page of war and glory Some hand has writ his name THEY ARE BROTHERS NOW The Spirit that Exists Between Veterans of Both Sides Although the horrors of war are the more conspicuous where the conflict is between brothers and the struggle is a long and desperate one the evidences are numerous that underneath the passion and bitterness ol our civil war there were counter currents of kindly feeling a spirit of genuine friendliness pervading the op posing camps This friendliness was something deeper than the expression of more human instinct the combatants felt that they were indeed brothers Acts of kindness to wounded enemies began to be noted at Bull Run while in every cam paign useless picket firing was almost uni formly discountenanced and the men shook hands at the outposts and talked confidingly of their private affairs and their trials and hardships in the army This feeling confined perhaps to men on the very front line culminated at Appo mattox where the victors shared rations with their late antagonists and gener ously offered them help in repairing the Avastes of battle When the Union veteran returned to the North he did not disguise his faith in the good intentions of the Southern fighting man The spirit that moved Lincoln to say in his last inaugural With malice toward none has continued its holy influence That which must appear to the world at largo a startling anomaly is in truth the simple principle of good will unfolding itself under favorable conditions The war that is the actual encounter on the field taught the participants the dignity of American character Their Annual Reunion Hull I M nv4 ov cryl MIA z Mb W 3 V V -- mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmHmammmmmKmmmmBmmmamm ht i f is mfjmi5mmAmmmmmrsw ufoiimf y2jji W5 SHBPP9WH8np mrtiL r H fill The Man of the Musket Soldiers pass on from this rage of renown This ant hill commotion and strife Tass by where the marbles and brouzes looi down With their fast frozen gestures of life Oh out to the nameless who lie neath the gloom Of the pitying cypress and pine Your man is the man of the sword and the plume But the man of the musket is mine I knew him By all that Is noble I knew J2 v MM IS This commonplace I ero I name Ive camped with him marched with him fought with him too In the swirl of the fierce battle flame Laughed with him cried with him taken a part Of his canteen and blanket and known That the throb of this chivalrous prairio boys heart Was an answering stroke of my own I knew him I tell you And also I knew When he fell on the battle swept ridge That the poor battered body that lay there in blue Was only a plank in the bridge Over which some should pass to a fame That shall shine while the high stars shall shine Your hero is known by an echoing name But the man of the musket is mine I knew him All through him the good and the bad Ran together and equally free But I judge as I trust Christ will judge tho brave lad For death made him noble to me In the cyclone of war in the battles eclipse Life shook out its lingering sands And he died with the names that he loved on his lips His musket still grasped in his hands Up close to the flag my soldier went down In the salient front of the line You may take for your heroes the men of renown But the man of the musket is mine The Bourbons in Spain In none of their many sovereignties had the incapacity of the Bourbons beeii niore completely demonstrated than in Spain With intermittent flick erings the light of that famous land had been steadily growing dimmer ever since Louis XIY exultingly de clared that the Pyrenees had ceased to exist Stripped of her colonial su premacy shattered in naval power re duced to pay tribute to France she looked silently on while Napoleon traf ficked with her lands mourning that even the memory of her former glories was fading out in foreign countries The proud people themselves had how ever never forgotten their past with each successive humiliation their irri tation grew more extreme and soon after Trafalgar they made an effort to organize under the crown prince against the scandalous regime of Go doy Both parties sought French sup port and the quarrel was fomented from Paris until the whole country was torn by the most serious dissen sions Century - FOR VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT frjanizinr and Carrying Out a Move ment for the Betterment of Towns John Gilmer Speed writes upon how to organize and conduct a Village Im provement Society in the Ladies Home Journal He prefaces his paper with the assertion that the -future prosper ity of the country village depends in a great measure upon its suitability for the summer residence of those who prefer at that season to leave the hot and crowded cities and argues fur ther that a Village Improvement So ciety should be a pure democracy and within its membership it should em brace every man and woman of good repute in the neighborhood and be sides this there should be established an auxiliary league of children This league should be asked and urged and instructed to assist the main society Such societies are usually supported by fees and dues This is very well in a village where the majority of the peo ple are quite prosperous and usually have a store of ready money at their disposal But even in such places I pre fer the method of supporting the so ciety by purely voluntary subscriptions of money labor and material Labor is just as good as money and is given much more freely by all save those who are rich After canvassing the matter Mr Speed suggests a public meeting to be addressed by some one familiar with the details of the work preceding pre liminary organization and the adoption of a constitution Permanent officers and committees should be named at the first meeting and preceding the second one the first labor day should be observed On that day all the men and teams in the village should congre gate to work under the direction of the executive committee and the ladies of the society should provide a picnic luncheon for the workers that day In some untidy villages the whole of the first labor day might be given to clean ing up in others the sidewalks might be put in better order or pieces of new sidewalk constructed in nearly every village it would be a good thing to put the grounds and fences of the public schoolhouse in order But there are always very obvious needs everywhere before the advent of the village er But what is done that day should be done with some thoroughness and the noonday luncheon is apt to invest the day with some of the characteristics of a festival What is done will be dis cussed in every house of the village and the achievements will inspire con fidence or provoke criticism Or Simple Tastes By means of frugality the Turkish farmer is able to eke out what we should consider a miserable existence His home is a hovel constructed sun dried mud bricks This one-roomed hovel without any windows the only light and air admitted comes down the chimney serves him and his family as their residence Adjoining this we find a cellar like building which serves to house his live stock AH the surroundings are dirt and un tidiness His food produced at little cost consists for the greater part of bread for which he grows the wheat This is sometimes varied by a soup made of sour milk and crushed wheat boiled this is a most nourishing and satisfying dish ne also cooks an other dish equally good of crushed wheat boiled and flavored with fresh butter Sometimes he indulges in a dish of fried eggs Coffee he drinks occasionally This completes his diet ary and simple as it is he is strong and healthy and generally of fine phys ique He thinks nothing of a twenty or thirty mile walk or of doing a days work of sixteen hours He would fare badly with the eight hour sys tem His clothing costs him even less than his food He cultivates the cot ton from which the women spin the yarn and weave the calico for his clothes He also allows himself a jack et made of bright colored print Th sheep finds him material for a warmer covering he knits his own stockings Boots are unknown to him he manu factures out of a piece of untanned cowhide a pair of sandals His cattle find him fuel he collects all their ma nure and dries it in the sun Tnis warms his house it makes a good bright fire and also serves to light his room Lamps and candles are too great a luxury Tobacco he sometimes indulges in And yet in spite of all this frugality he remains poor How tue Brain Acts in Insomnia Sir James Crichton Browne the ex pert on brain diseases holds that in somnia is not attended with such dis astrous consequences as is commonly supposed It is not as dangerous as the solicitude of the sufferer He suggests that the brains of literary men who are the most frequent victims acquire the trick of the heart which takes a doze of a fraction of a second after each beat and so manages to get six hours rest in twenty four Some urains in cases of insomnia sleep in sections different brain centers going off duty in turn Marine and Land Engines It is often a matter of wonder how a marine engine attaining an efficiency greater than those on land can be made in so simple a form and contain only one half as many pieces The answer is found mainly in the fact that the resistance to marine engines is con stant and uniform or nearly so and they can for this reason dispense with speed regulating gearing which causes most of the complications in land en gines The governor trip gearing cush ioning apparatus and so on is what sails for so many pieces Plants for Jail Birds Prisoners in theBangor Me jail are to be supplied with potted plants to care for in their cells It is believed the care of the plants will have an ele va ting and reforming influence Extreme tired feeling afflicts nearly every body at this season The hustlers cease to push the tirelers grow weary the en ergetic become enervated Tou know just what we mean Some men and women endeavor temporarily to overcome that Tired Feeling by great force of will But this js unsafe as it pulls powerfully npon the nervous system which will not long stand such strain Too many people work oa their nerves and the result is seen in un fortunate wrecks marled nervous pros tration in every direction That tired rrg is a positive proof of thin weak impure i lo d for if the blood is rich red vitalized and vigorous it imparts life and energy to every nerv organ and tissue of the body The necessity of taking Hoods Sarsaparilla for that tirel feeling is therefore apparent to every one and the gcod it will do you is equally beyond question Kemember that Gladness Comes With a better understanding of the transient nature of the many phys ical ills which vanish before proper ef forts gentle efforts pleasant efforts rightly directed There is comfort in tlie knowledge that so many forms of sickness are not due to any actual dis ease but simply to a constipated condi tion of the system which the pleasant family laxative Syrup of Figs prompt ly removes That is why it is the only remedy with millions of families and is everywhere esteemed so highly by all who value good health Its beneficial effects are due to the fact that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness without debilitating the organs on which it acts It is therefore all important in order to get its bene ficial effects to note when you pur chase that you have the genuine article which is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co only and sold by all rep utable druggists If in the enjoyment of good health snd the system is regular then laxa tives or other remedies are not needed If afflicted with any actual disease one may be commended to the most skillful physicians but if in need of a laxative then one should have the best and with the well informed everywhere Syrup of Figs stands highest and is most largely v at used andgives most general satisf actior A quarter spent in HIRES Rootbeer does you dollars worth of good Mde only The Charles E Hires Co Philadelphia X i5c package miiei 5 ealloas Sold everywhere ill Harry M Conrad of No 1744 Twelfth street Washington D C says I can speak in the highest praise of Ripans Tabules I have been for years troubled with night mare an orroneous expression but one that thousands are familiar with and have suffered a thousand deaths being caused directly by a torpid liver thence stagnation of the blood A short while after retiring I would experience the most terrible sensation that human can fall heir to such as having heavy weights upon you seeing horrible animals burglars etc and being unable to get out of their reach I have tried everything on the market that I could think would be of any benefit butnever struck the right remedy until I tried Ripans Tabules and since that time nightmare with me is a thing of the past I am fully con vinced that Ripans Tabules are a good thing for suffering humanity and I feel that I could not exist without them And I will further say for the benefit of others know ing there are thousands suffering in the same manner profit by my experience and try them you will never regret it Ripans Tabules are sold by drupelsts or bj mall ir the price 0 cents a box Is sent to The JUpans cneml il7l0 cenk0 10 SprUC6 Street w Vorfc Spie IENSION35X2SS Si iffcoTi if Iv Drncooiifftp OIqivmc 3 xrs In last war 15 aiUudlcatiuc claims attysinee flllflFK WHfHE All CICC CflltC Best Cough Syrup Taates Good Use in mne poiq py aruuBiats J h J Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier All druggists 1 Prepared only by C I Hood Co Lowell Mass 11WU s Pillare eas to take easy to operate 25 cents X v I 1 r J f 1 AT i c f fj J M s i