rTvr t i -I.' Opinions of Great Papers on Important Subjects. 2 A A FATAL POOL BELIEF. SURI'RlSl.Mil.Y large number of other wise Intelligent pMst:s still entertain the belief that, necording to Inw, those who discover n presumably dead body must It'll vp It as they find U until the coroner arrives or minimizes Its removal. It Is true that In iT.se of n murder, or even of death by accident, It Is well for those who find the lody to leave It mill Its surroundings as nearly - unmo lested as Is consistent wlih common sense. This Is In order that no cluv as to the manner of death limy Ik destroyed, lint to did n man bunging by the neck nnd not cut hliu down, or to llml n man Boutin In the water und not make every effort at resuscitation pro vlding, of course, that the condition of the body does not lreclnde the possibility of life Is to do that which can be called less than homicide only on the ground of Ig norance. A case in point was that of Monday at Greenwich, Conn. Dominlck Bond, supervisor of const m't Ion on a ea wall, fell Into the water. Ills companions finally got bold of him, passed a mpo about hisliody and tied It to pier, supposing the man to be deid. Then they sent for the coroner. When that oHieinl arrived he found the man certainly dead, but declared that had he been removed from the water and ordinary means employed Jit the time his companions secured the body he could Jhave Won resuscitated. Strange how some of these old .beliefs survive! l.'tiea Globe. Ml Kumaumrm mm zri.rE3. ANKI.NI) is learning rapidly which of the myriad kinds of 'living things are friends and which are enemies. Pcrts that ruin crop are zealously studied and fought by the farmer, but sonic pests that endanger human life are tolerated because 'their rr.vag"s are not visible to tne unscieniinc ye. It took brave experiment to discover that the mos . , 1 1 1 a io n ilnnillv 4iiioii,v nf- num. and & lonff cam paign of education was necessary to prove the fact to the public. The rat, being odious and a destroyer of property, was more easily proved to lie a disease-bearing scours. The International Association for the Scl eutlflc Destruction of Rats, founded in Denmark, Is not a fantastic society, as Is attested by the work in San Francisco and other cities against this creeping vehicle of the bubonic plague'. The mosquito uud the rut have "got to go." And so fins the house-Hy, which, far from being only a buzzing nuisance', causes thousands of deaths a year. During the civil war It wn found that Hies carried gangrene. This early discovery has been explained by the later Jlknowleilge of disease germs. The fly Is attracted to all kinds of filth ; his feet are barbed brushes which pick'. up dirt; and his track across the food we eat is n path of pestilence when sel-n Ixv neath the microscope, lie is the "principal agent In the spread of typhoid." The increase of "summer com plaints," intestinal diseases. Is r.ot due to hot weather the human body easily adjusts Itself to mere temper- Btur! but largely to the Increase of tiles from May t August. The tradition of the relation between filth and dis ease Is sound; and the clean housekeeper has always fought flies with screens and fly-traps. : These old-fashioned defenses are still practical.' In addition, the keeper of horses should screen his manure pile and spray It with creosote or chloride of lime. To allow files on food Is to run the risk of disease; to al low flies to breed In or visit poisonous matter Is to en danger one's neighbors. Youth's Companion. T THE LIFE-INSURANCE "TWISTER." . HE "Twister," according to an Insurance re port of Illinois, Is the anarchist In life In surance. We hate anarchy In any form, and are glad to see that one of the old line companies is hard on the trail of the twister. The twister, as most of our read ers doubtless know, seeks to switch policies from one company to another. He Is like tha bee who, Instead of getting honey from the flowers, robs the hive of his neighbors. In the past twisters have been agents of other companies, but a new typo has pprung up. II usually calls himself an Insurance expert, or an Insur ance adviser, or some other name that anything but de scribes him. He writes to the policyholder and asks for the privilege of showing how the latter moy get more Insurance in some other company for the same rate. It is needless to say that this other company Is often some company which has no financial standing. Just at the present time the twister Is giving up to his name by trying to twist a wrong interpretation Into the Armstrong law, by saying that deferred or tontine divi dends are outlawed, and by attempting to scare policy holders In other ways. The only way to treat the anarchist of life Insurance .Is to drive him out of busi ness by having nothing to do with him. Leslie's Weekly. m PERSONAL EQUATION IN SUCCESS. F you stop for a moment to analyze success In business you will see that it comes through contact with people. It is all hinged -upon the manner of your contact On every side you are surrounded by a multitude of persons, in every one of whom there exists a potential force that may be exerted, at one time or another, to add to your success. The oftene'r you cause that force to be ex erted, the faster your business will grow. You can at tract these Individual forces, If you choose, and get the most from them. Or you can repel them and suffer actual damage from having come in contact with them. Or you may take a middle course, as many business men do, and drift along in purely negative manner. Looking at business In this light, It Is apparent that the underlying element which contributes most to the success of any undertaking, and to business in the aggre gate, is the art of finding the vital points of human con tact that will set In motion these forces. The personal element must be stamped upon your business. System. &AiiAJj'jraxbu.uiiitri. akeial Psychology. The new Institute of Zoological Psy chology has a plant on u farm in the neighborhood of Paris. The exact lo cation, the New York Sun's corre spondent says, is kept secret, to avoid hindrance to the work by crowds of merely curious visitors. The property Includes meadows and barn-yards, a wood of .considerable sl.e, and a large loud stocked with tlsh. There are spacious buildings. Including modern stables, n riding school, stalls for iso lating nulnials under special observa tion, an injtiarluni nnd a laboratory. On the roof of the) main buildiiig Is a dove-cote. How far the desire to study the bublts ofvIivlng creatures under nat ural conditions niuybo carried is illus trated In the fact that a complete div ing apparatus has been provided in which observers descend to the bottom of tho pond. There they remain for tours, until the fish become accus tiWucd tj their presence, and follow their natural impulses in playing and feeding. The student Is thus enabled to note their habits at first hand. Tlie oilier extreme or observation is in. t-uu:i iiii:liiii (ii HiitMifri'ii iiiiiniirnin dents sit through the night armed with an electric llushllght to watch the doings of owls, bats and noctur nal Insects. One of the conclusions reached by tho students of the Institute is that some animals possess a Bpcclal sense by which they can detect the presence of water even though they ennnot see It. The experiments were undertaken at the suggestion of David All a resident of Australia ond a corre sponding member, who wrote to the Institute of his experiences with sheep and cattle when being driven across country. In a place where the pres ence of water was wholly unexpected, be says, "the leading animals would suddenly lift their heads and draw long breaths. Then they would almndo:i the beaten tracks and start running through the brush." Sometimes they would run a nniv. ami a half to two miles, and could not be stopped by the drivers, their course Invariably leading to a pond or spring hitherto unknown. Tlie eincrlments were made on a vater-rnt. First Its eyes were blinded J a bandage, and then It was placed ZT. a turntable, which was whirled round until all sense of direction must have ,oecn obliterated. I'jon being released, without a moment's hesitation I! started directly for the pond, several hundred yard' distant. Frogs and toads were taken to a dis tance oi uirco or lour miles rrom water and turned loose. U seemed to take them only n few seconds to local the water, line oni iniu-i loan snowed the lustlnet la the muiiu degree as' the other. Tli nnfnrn or Hourcn nf fi la .A't clearly discerned. The observers is the sight of birds and the homing instinct of the carrier-pigeon. Many of the members of the institute are In clined to consider this a phenomenon of far sight.. They have been taking by triaugulatlon the height to which the birds soar, and from that figuring out the radius of vision they attain. A bird which reaches a height of eight hundred yards can see objects more than sixty miles distant, and that they ore keen-sighted enough to recognize them cannot be doubted. At three miles a vulture enu descry the carcass of a kid hung on a pole. $ "DON'T WOEEY." CANADA HOME OF GOLF. t'lml Club In North America Found ed at Montreal. As In the case of that other great Scottish sport, curling, the honor of having founded the first golf club in America belongs to Montreal, the Cana dian metropolis, says Recreation. Early In the '"Os of the last century a Mr. Sidney, n well-known golfer and curler of his day. approached the Caledonian society of Montreal, whose charter pro vides for tho encouragement of Scot tish sports among other things, with regard to the desirability of forming a golf club in Montreal. , Nov. 4, 1S73, saw tlie' Montreal Golf Club founded. A course was laid out on the side .of Mount Koyal, the eminence from which the city derives its name, and R club house was built. Mount Royal Is a public park, but arrangements were made with the authorities for the use of the course and ever since then, year after year, the course has been kept up at considerable expense, until at the present time It is one of the brightest freshest nnd most wholesome looking stretches of Mount Royal. To perjetu ate the memory of the man who had been mainly Instrumental In tho found ing of the club n hole was named after him and when in later years the club took up fresh quarters nt Dixie, on the shores of Iike St. Louis, the same thing was done on the new links. In 1SX1 the Montreal Golf Club, through the Intercession of the Marquis of Luns downe, the governor general of Canada at that time, with her late majesty tjuecn Victoria, obtained the privilege to assume the ailix "royal" and to le known thereafter as the Royal Mon I real Golf Club. A 4irr.it Tiling. "Gee! I wlrhcd I was a Inventor," e tela lined Jimmy, loafing around the ball park. "What fur?'' demanded Tommy. "I'd invent a knot hole w'at yer could carry a round wld jTr an' stick In a fence arywhercs yer pleased." Phila delphia Press. . 'I'tie' I aually Are. Mr. Hubbubs I understand the ladles of the neighborhood are going to or ganize a Dorcas society." Mrs. Subbubs Oh, that's all talk. Mr. Subbubs Of course, that's the (V.iVct of every Dorcas society. PalU- 111s name was Hezeklah Doolittle, and he was blessed with a sanguine temperament. When he proposed to Annie Warner, she inquired what means he hud with which to support a wife. "None whatever," said the cheerful Hezeklah, "but poverty is no disgrace, and some day I expect to strike It rich." They were married and went to live with Annie's parents, "until something turned up." Hezeklah passed by the small jobs, looking for something big, but he was always on band for meals. Annie fretted because they were a burden on her parents, and chlded him for his inaction. "Don't worry," said he. "It will spoil your bcuuty." Hey-ekiah lived up to his own creed and refused to worry, no matter how great the provocation. Even when Annie's parents turned them out he was lerfectly calm. "The Lord vrlll pro vide!" he exclaimed, placidly; but his wife wasted no time la talk. She rented a small cottage, bought some rurulture on credit, and took In washing. . "The debt on the furniture will soon be due," 6he reminded him one day. "'Never trouble trouble until trouble troubles you,' " quoted Hezeklah. So his wife did plain sewing at night to Increase their scanty Income. Then a baby was born, and Annie was unable to work. "What shall we do?" she cried. s "Don't worry. It will Injure your health," soothed Hezeklah. "I am still exiting something to turn up." Annie's folks helped them for a year, and then she rented a larger bouse and took In boarders. "The rent will soon be due," she told tur hiu-'band, ns she glanced anxiously at the calendar. "Take no thought for the morrow," reproved ller.tkluh. "The morrow w'll take thought for the things of Itself." Annie worked harder. 'Her caws la creased ns the family 'Increased, anl sin' lost her beauty, her health and nor temper. "You worry too much," remonstrated her husband. "Why don't you take a hopi-fnl view of life, as I do?" Human cmlu'.aiicc has Its limits, and the end ctune at last. Annie died of overwork, her parents took the children, and the hopel'il Hezeklah was left to sbiCt for himself. "'1 lie world owes m a living," ild lie, so he took to the road. As ho tramped out of the village, past tho little country cemetery, his eyes sought out t lie ansodiled grave of his wife, ai d sighed. The ways of Providence are Inscrut able," he murmured, resignedly. "She wis a good wife, but she would worry." Life Is one glad, swevt song to me," fald the citizen with the ruddy com plexion. "To-morrow I envelop my man ly form In n flannel shirt nnd an old' pair of trousers and go a-flshin'." "Huhl" said the man with the pro truding lower Up, with contempt In his one. "What's the matter?" asked the rud- ly -complex ioned citizen. "Don't you like to go fishing? I thought you were quite an angler? Seems to me I've heard you brag alnnit a twclve-p.uitnl iass that you caught once when nolmdy was looking. I never heard of any one nit an Imaginative enthusiast catching bass that weighed twelve pounds. Kight is the highest I've ever dared to atch." "I used to like llshlns fairly well when I was younger uud better aide to stand hardship," said the man with the protruding lower lip. "It's o little too much like work for nie now." "Work!" exclaimed the other man. "What are you talking about? Work! You must be crazy. Do you call sitting under u shady tree and listening to tho ripple of the water against the bank working? What do you call 'sweltering in an ollice from 9 till 5?" "I Kiiid 'work' and I meant work," insisted t lie objector. "It's work and mental r.n;?u!sli. What's more, the shady Iree Isn't there. It's the hot, blazing sun nil day, and if you're fool enough to wait after the sun gies.dv.vii It's clouds ami swarms of poisonous mosquitoes. I've got n shady tree In my back yard If I want to do any loaf ing In the shade, and I can get a good imitation of rippling water with the lawn sprinkler. 1 thought you were talking about fishing." "I was," said the ruddy-complexioned citizen. "I was talking of tho de lights " "And there isn't any place to sit down," Interrupted tlie man with tho protruding lower lip. "I know nil about it. The ground on Ihe bank is too moist to sit on, and If tbero ore any shady trees It means that you're going to get your tackle tangled up In the branches and have to climb and scrape the skin off your knees. I've been there, so you needn't tell me." "I was speaking of the Joys of fish ing, not the petty incidental discomforts that you exaggerate," said the citizen with the ruddy complexion. "I was thinking of the thrill of rapture I shall feel when the tug comes nt the line; of the triumph of landing a fine, leap ing. Mapping fellow on the prass; of the constantly lengthening string am the spoil." "You weren't thinking of finding that the boy who was to bring you your bait failed to materialize, eh?'' inquired tho man with' tho protruding lip, sarcastic ally. "You weren't thinking of chas ing over a marsh In mud up to your knees In search of frogs that were hard er to catch than, the fish? No? You didn't contemplate the solitary, measly little fish that you did hook getting away from you?" "You bet your life I wasn't contem plating anything of tho kind," said the ruddy-complex Ioned citizen.. Nor the rainstorm? I suppose you like to clean fish when you do catch them what? Get yourself covered with slime and fish scales and run the fins Into your hands !" I'll Just clean enough for a mess nt the place where I'm going to stay for dinner and then take the rest hnme." sold the other. "I get word that they're biting fine. You'd better come along." "I think I see myself," said the scoff er. "How far is it, anyway, and are yon Just going for the day?" "Forty miles out nnd the' finest place know of within a hundred, You can bet on the bait's being ready for us, and If we don't catch fish I'll never fish again. We'll have eight good hours for It. What do you say?" "Let's look at your time table," said the man with tlie protruding lower lip. Chicago Daily News. RETEOSPECTIOIT. King, thou sweet bird of the days gone forever, When o'er the greensward I rumbled so rreej Tell of tho Joys that return to me never. Save In tho song thou urt singing to ma Far, far away are the fields decked with flowers. Blossoms that once were tho Joy of my heart; Long I sat binding them 'nenth tho cool bowers. Crude tho' ,uy skill, nnd as childish my art In the dull uncke of a hurrying city, Hero was I destined alone to abide. Toilsome my lot: Oh, the pity, the pity. Thus to be caged, when the world Is so wide J a Phantom Raft In the early days of the gold-mining craze thousands of young men pushed out Into the great northwest, without any very deinlto notion of where they were going, or what their plan of action would be wpea they got there. They shaply Joined the stamped! for the Pa cific coast. Imping to gain some trust worthy Information cu route; or, break ing nwoy entirely from the main body of gold-Beekers, thty ventured Into un known regions, In the hope of discover ing some rich deposit In a locality where there would be, la all probability, none to dispute their claim, or to object to their pre-empting and working a wholo township, If they wished. Among tho latter wero my college chum, Robert Trefry, ami myself. We got It Into our beads that tho region near the headwaters of tho Yellow stono river, then but very llrtlo known, ought to bo rich In mineral deposits, though wo bad but little or no evidence upon which to base such a supposition. But with the usual hot-headed ness and romantic disposition of youth, wo longed to get out of the beaten track, and combine a llttlo of the excitement of exploration with that of gold-seeking. So, while the rest of our little parry kept on to California, we branch ed off toward tho northwest, equipped with the usual prospectors outfit, and were soon beyond the outposts of civili sation. After three days of hard traveling, without having seen a human Hieing or a sign of one, we unexpectedly came up with an old hwiter and trapper, who was "backing" a load of supplies from the settlements to his lonely cabin In what Is now. the great Yellowstone Park. Acquaintances are soon formed j j in the wilderness, and In less than flf- At . . . ,A. , i iiTT-u Mini it iro uiv Hirait. i I'll I L til. iliu triumphant return with the finny I , . . , . , 1 . , , to our pack-mule, and we were all Tamping aiong togetner. talking as i ili'liililn Press. ave named It the sense of humidity. i They believe It consists in h perception! After the Mipper is oer ana me of the direction In which the atuirm- j dishes dine, a woman removes her rdiere contains most moisture. An f uort' Kitchen apron and sits down beside will be made to discover whether nuyjlier husband with an air that snys. men pofste It. Now, tell me ull that has happened Aras tha subjects ef laTestijatrcn, to-day. You girls who are more or less j snippy becauso you are young and good looking, remember that it will not take you long to get over It. A girl passes from the young to the old crowd In. four years. The people always catch It ; the poor man says "the people snub him"; the rlefc bii says "the senile are toadies." For many days wo Journeyed toward the souni'S of the river, following the vast, yawning canon, over whose edge we oftea stopped to peer, nmazed nt Its dark, cavernous depths. At some points the gulf was simply awe-inspiring, the walls of rock rising nearly a quarter of a mile straight up from the water. It was ou the ninth day of our Jour ney up the river, at noon, tho oui trapper was walking In advance, lead Ing the pack-mule. All nt once be stopped so suddenly that the mule's drooping head run Into him, and came near knocking him over the precipice. Ho staggered, recovered his balance, and struck back at the mule with bis left hand, but never turned his face an In stant from the gulf Into which he was staring. As we came hurriedly up, we noticed the pallor of the old man's check. Even his stern-cut profllo showed tho horror depleted upon his features. Apparently, ho did not heed our approach, or notice us, as we lunit cautiously over the brink of the canon, and gazed down at the dark river, hundreds of feet below. The sight that met our eyes was cer tainly enough to chill the blood in man's veins, and send a shiver down his backbone. About fifteen feet out from the wall of rock upon which we stood, a rudely built raft was floating up stream. On this raft lay the skeletons of two men, glistening horribly white out of the shadow of the canon walls To the middle of the raft was bound n large bundle, carefully wrapped in slickers, the material of which had not yet rotted away. Two rusty rifles and an nxe completed tho freight of the weird craft. Too astonished to speak a word, we all three stood rooted In our tracks, watching the phantom raft, as It, ap parently, made Its way .up stream, against the current of the mighty river. For a hundred feet or more It glided along, smoothly and steadily. Then, of had watched the shot with eyes thaf fairly bulged from their sockets. When he. saw the axe fink beneath the water his whole demeanor suddenly changed. Raising his own rifle quickly, be fired, and the next Instant a puff like a small loud of smoke rose from the bundle In the center of the raft. As It cleared way, we saw a wide, ragged rent In the hnlf rotren wrappings, and out of this rent was pouring a shining yellow treara. The trappc turned to us with a tri umphant smile. I thought so," he said. "It Is the stolen gold. Now I understand how It happened, riorre and Mort thought It would be safer to take It away down the river. So- they built a raft. Bui the raft got caught In the big whirlpool of the niaek Gap, and they couldn't get It out. And here they've been going round and round for eleven years In a trap that no man could get out allvs from. The breath has gone out of their ImmIIcs, and the flesh has fallen off their bones, but the gold has been kept safe all these years. It is tho Judgment of heaven J" We went up stream five failles, till ws came to a olert where a tributary stream made Its way down to the Yel lowstone. Near Its mouth we fouud enough driftwood lodged to build an other raft; and the next morning we floated down, to tho whirlpool. Using the utmost care, lest we ourselves should get caught In the back current, we managed to fasten upon the treas ure raft with a long, rude pike-pole, nnd by our united strength In paddling and towing, we drew tho other raft out of tho whirlpool, and suffering both to float together down stream, succeeded n landing, late that day, at a spot where another cleft mado It possible to climb the canon wall. The gold diist was a treasure, Indeed, not less than half a bushel of It, by careful measurement. Wo carried It back to the trapper's cabin, and Trefry nnd I left him there to guard It, while we prospected diligently for four months. In the hope of finding tho lead from which It was taken. But not an ounce of gold did we scrape together between us. j On our return we took the gold out to the settlements apd advertised for Its owners. But though several claims were put In by unprincipled parties, no one was able to prove property; and finally we came to the conclusion that the treasure fairly belonged to those who found It. We tried to get the old trapper to take his third, but he would, not touch a penny. "I should have no use for It," he said. It woujd only He behind my fireplace." So Trefry and I went back to "the States," richer by twenty thousand dol lars. the treasure-trove of the Phantom Raft. Chicago Dally News. "WE MANAGED TO FASTEN 1'1'ON THE TREASURE RAFT." leave, III "lll Time." When Wilkins' family arranged To go away a mouth or ro, His f acini expression changed To one of sorrow and of woe. He snid lie wished they wouldn't Hut tliey refused to be misled. "O. don't protend that you will grieve." The family in concert said, "For you'll be having a big time." And when at last their train had gone And he stood looking1 down t lie track And wutclieil It rolling swiftly on. And wished tlint it. was coming: back. He turned and met a friend and sighed : "They've Rone I don't know what to do." His friend looked at him, merry eyed. And said: "Old man, I'm on in you And you'll be having a big lime." He ate wherever be niilit be And triod to find a little fun; A show or two he went to see, Hut left before the play were done; And those who knew hiin nodded then Ills mood nml manner well l Io y read! "His family's away nir.iin." Willi knowing wink nnd smile' they Kllld. "And he's just having a big lime." Hut Willin slowly homeward went Ami wandered lliroiidi I lie silent rooms Where memories persistent blent Titei'is "Ives with nil t lie hollow glooms, lie thomiht of her heart warming smile And liow the children used to play, And then he said: "It's quite a while ' Already since they went uw:iy I'm ain't I having a big time V" ('lii;iil'o Tribune. DlxelplliirU. "These millionaires are discovering i hut they can't run everything to suit themselves," suld tho discontented per sou. "No," answered the observant one "not since the multimillionaires came along." Washington Star. How people love an old saying! They are ulways quoting, "There Is nothing new under tha sun," yet thers U souietUUi uew evrr d.'.y. freely as if we had been companions from the start My partner and I soon found that the advantage lay as much upon our. side as upon the trapper's, for the latter'e Intimate knowledge of tho country made him a sure guide, and lie was also able to tell us pretty much nil we wanted to know nlwut the headwaters of the Yellowstone, exceptlug whether gold was to be found there. The old man declared that he never had any desire to accumulate the yellow iiietnl, ns he did not care for the value It represented in the marts of civilization. So long ns he could barter bis furs for the sim ple nccessltb's of a hunter's life his ev ery want was satisfied. "Do you know whether any other party of prosiiectors ever came Into this section la search of gold?" asked Trefry of the old man, as we sat by our camp fire, smokiug, one evening. It wus n minute or more Is-fore the trapper auswered. Then he said, sim ply: "Yes, but I don't know what ever bo came of them." Further questioning only caused him to shake his head. "I can't tell you," he would say. "They never came buck uiy way, at least." We began to suspect that there Una some mystery nUmt tho matter that dis quieted our coinpau'.o:i. The subject was ouo that he did not like to talk about We brought It up sctiiI times afterwards, but could get nothing more out of him. i ' "I bfdleve tlie old fiIlow has u grain of superstition In lib make-up," whi'i pered Robert to me, iis the trapper took his nxe and went out among the shad ows to cut more wood for tlie lire. "Hf has either seen tlie ghost of ono of those prospectors, or Imagines be has I'd give a good deal to know what In came of them.'' By Oils time we hud reached the val ley of the Yellowstone, If that high table-land through which tho river has cut Its tomb-liko chtinnel can properly be called a valley. The trapper's cabin Mil been reached und passed. Jt was evident that he wished to aosompauy us farther, ami we were not nt ull averse to his doing so, for we hud found blui not only very helpful In ways where oar Ignorance was anytblrg but bliss, but also an ogreeuble comiwnlon. As for bis occasional fits of suiierntitlon,- thej only suiumU us. i sudden, it paused, swerved, began to ivhirl. Mind finally shot out towards the middle of the stream, und was carried swiftly down by the muln current For fully three hundred feet It sped ulong; then It wus drawn sharply to wards the cliff, and thrust out of the iiialu current Into a great wlilrliKiol which on more carried It steadily up stream, only a few feet outskle the wall of rock on which we stood. "Look there!" cried the old trapper. breaking the strained silence for ;tl first time, and pointing downwards with his trembling finger. "Those uro the ghosts of Pierre and Mart, coiideiuiKd to float forever up and down the Black (Jap ! I told them no good would com of stealing the gold. I warned them that Hod's vengeance would follow them. If they killed the limocvut men who dug the treasure out of tlie rocks." The old man cover.d his face with his ha uds, nnd shrunk back upon the ground, while Ticfry's eyes and mine met In a significant look. The mystery was out! The prosiiectors had been murdered, and tlie old trar.per, our guide, knew the men who had done the deed. Hut we could not think about the tragedy thru. Our eyes returned with uu Irresistible fascination to tne mys terious raft. Could it, Indeed, be a phantom, ns the old man had said? Wits Its strange course, up nnd down the canon, tlie result of a supernatural agency, or merely nf natural laws? We watched It breathlessly, as it swept up stream and again npproat'lied the point where Its course had hi abruptly changed. Once more it slopped and spun, as if struck by lanni; strong op posing force, against which It was held hy tile ctiuuler-i iirrcut l'roai behind. Again It tiliot out towards tlie middle of the stream, uud floated rrpidly dowu current, only to be caught once more by tho strange whirlpool and sent back beneath tlie ciifT. "line thing Is sure." mid my compan ion. "That is no plianti iii raft, und to prove it, I will knock that uxe lulu tho wuter with a bullet." Trefry wns a crack shot, and be knelt, rested his elbow on his knee, took careful uim. nnd tired. The next In stunt the axe. which had been lying near the edge of the raft, disappeared lu the black water. The 1U rriipptT, ttartg io bltitiuwa, DEFYING A TORNADO. Ilrhatlor of American Troops In tho l'"ao of Awfal Death. One of the most, remarkable events In the annals of American arms occur red nt Fort Crook, Neb., the other day when n tornado struck the place, snys the Kansas City Journal. As the dis patches tell the Btory: "When the offi cers realized that a tornado bad struck tho post 000 men of the Sixth regiment were brought to battalion formation, und in the midst of flying slate roofs nnd other debris they were marched across the parade ground to the sub stantial buildings, where they were put ' 'ut rest,' and took to the cellars. The fort wus damaged to the extent of $100,000." History and fiction alike have dwelt upon the dauntless spirit of men who have manifested their willingness to "charge the gates of hell or scale the heights of heaven," but doubtless no better Illustration of the spirit was ever given than when this devoted band of American soldiers at Fort Crook form ed ranks to "do or dlo" together In the face of u resistless tornado. Tlios.e who have never viewed the fury of one of these terrible outbursts of the angry elements can not Imagine tltf dreadful reality of the scene, with tho heavens blacker than night, the darkness Intensified by blinding flashes of lightning, the terrors of the storm multiplied by the terrific crushes of heuvenX artillery, and thej air filled with swirling clouds which hide all else but tho awful figure of death, the ghastly funnel-shaped cloud which makes gigantic leaps along tho ground, uprooting trees and whirling houses, animals and human beings through tha sir on the wings of the death-denllng wind. It Is a sight to appall the stoutest heart and to cause tho human mind to realize the utter Impotence of man In the presence of angry nature. Ths charge of the Six Hundred at Hatak lava was a trivial Incident of military duty compared with the steadfast dis cipline of the 000 American sofcllers at Fort Crook who coolly formed In line and braved the tornados fury as though It were a matter of mere rout Ine duty. Ilia llraarn I'hrek. "Io you know, sir," observed Poeti- cus, "Unit on srniie uays i icei inucn brlghte and abler than - on others; these I call my golden days." "My golden days," returned Proser, "are pay days. After these come silver dn.is. when I get dowu to halves nml . quarters. These are followed by my nickel and copper days. Let mo see, now, this Is Friday. Isn't It? Ah, yes; then this is one of my brass days lend' me a liver, will you?" Boston Trans- , crlpt. A Sly Hint. "The macklnaw straw tiat Is all the (ro now," remarked Mr. Horetu. "In, lei d?" replied Miss Patleuco Comic, .winning, "lo bud you haven't a uiaekinaw with you tills evening." Philadelphia Press. When a country young man appears ou the street with u girl hanging o'u his arm, In 'mldltloi, to a haircut and a sliiive, It 1 u sure slgu that be U going to get married. Occasionally a man gets the reputa tion of being "deep" by saying talr.gs neither he nor anyone vise understands. Some farmers nre ah lull of Interest ing Information as a dog la of fleas. V l v