QUEER RACE. ronx or a strange PEoruc, CT WILLIAM WESTALI, CHAPTER XI.—CONTINUE!*. hy didn't you call me!” he said, re lifnlly. “You must be both tired and ry. Go and get something to eat, lieu turn in lor an hour or two. I i thluk we shall either ot us get much to-night,’* ? •hvf” ... iere is going to be a rhnnge cf weath 'he glass is going down fast, and i are gathering to windward. But all not get it just yet. When you sad your grub and your sleep, we reef the foresail. Than we shall be ! think." led promptly on old Tom's sugges or the air and the work had made th hungry nnd sleepy, cn I returned from my snooze, the lmd risen considerably, and blew in gusts; the sun went down red, amid » of ominous-looking clouds, and, ns iver said, there was every likelihood iirty night. The time had come to ie our spread of canvas, and the ship ! under a patent foretopsail nnd jib, we •ed and reefed the former without nlty. The bontswnln then made nil , battened down the hatches, and ;lit a suit of oilskin and a pair of sea for himself, and another for me, put water, nud grog within reach, and id the lanterns. When he had done at was necessary, or, rather, all that hid, he joined mo at the wheel, for, ns n, it would take two to steer, and all rnough. Iso it proved. The wind rose every nt, and though we had so little sail e ship went through the water like antic liucr at full speed. Then It a little, and the rain came down as can come down in the tropics, rat n the deck like discharges of mus and tumbling out of the scuppers in tdes. From time to time there came a lendous clap of thunder; the sky was to with lightning, which brought every und rope of the ship into vivid relief, Cast a lurid glow on an angry sea bil kl with foam-crested waves. But we | by no means In the center of the h, else it had gone ill with us; and the | by keeping the sea down somewhat, ably prevented us from being pooped, ben morning broke the rain was still Dg, and the wind blowing in strong b; the “Diana” was scudding before it, we were still both at the wheel; and pt for intervals of a few minutes, when Dr other of ns snatched a morsel of or took a pull at the bottle of halt tr grog which Tom had put under the ncle, we remained at the wheel all that Rial all the next night, hat distance we made in this time we do means of exactly computing; but B the wind begun to fall off, Tom tried ‘ate of sailing with the patent log, and id it to be eight knots; but our avernge S during the thirty-six hours the gale id must have been much more, and wo hblv ran not less than four hundred p. Where we were we could form on te very vaguest i lea, for our course been most erratic, the wind shifting inuiuiy. ben the storm abated, and there was lise ot better weather, Bolsover sug sd that I should turn In. am more used to this sort of thing you are,” he said. “I can stand it lie longer; but you are about used up, nk. Lie down for an hour or two, I [ waKen you up wnen i want you.” required no second bidding. I was ut» y spent, and only half conscious. With undressing, I threw myself on the k in the captain’s cabin, and almost >re my head touched the pillow was asleep. Then I awoke, as It seemed to me an r or ro later, the Bun was shining [Idly, and the boatswain lay asleep on floor. flnlloo!” I thought. “Has old Tom de ed his post? Why didn’the waken me?” ut when I looked out I saw that the sea i perfectly calm—not a breath of air I d its glassy surface—and the “Diana” there, os still anil motionless as “a nted ship upon a painted ocean.” learly no need for a man at the wheel, l Tom had done quite right to take his t without interrupting mine, fter a wash and a walk round the ship, ent to the galley, kindled the Are, made tcousc and pe^soup, and when all was tly returned to the cabin to look after n. He was just opening his eyes. Have you hod a good sleep?” I asked. Very; nud you?” Oli, pretty well. I must have had threo four hours, and if I had not been so hgry I should have goneou awhile long n ‘Three or four hours! Why, bless you, '. Erie, you have slept more like thirty nrsl” (‘Nonsense, Bolsover! I know better.” [‘Well, then, the snn Is going wrong. It is a good deal past noon when I turned i anil”—glancing at the sun—“it cannot much past eleven now. Yes, Mr. Erie, a have slept something like thirty hours, d me about twenty-four—and a good Ing, too. We wanted it. When it fell Im I knew as the ship could take care of rself, so I just lashed the wheel amid ips, laid myself down on the cabin floor iis i was, ana lee you go on wun your et p. And now let us have some grub, r I am most terrible sharp-set. auil that b scouse smells as sweet as a posy. We ay take our ease a bit now, Mr. Erie, his is a calm as will last, this Is.” "How ldng will it last, do you think." “The Lord only knowsl May be a fort icht, may be three weeks. I have heard t calms in these latitudes—we must be omewhere about the doldrums—I’ve heard if ’em lasting sis and seven weeks." “A pleasant prospect! Why, we shall be •early frizzled! I would rather have a itorm or two.” “That’s a sentiment os I should say amen o, if we had a rather more powerful crew, Ur. Erie; but with a ship’s company of two, officers and passengers included, I Would not pray for a gal?, though I might Whistle for a wind. With our small spread Df canvas a light breeze would not do ns much good, and it would not be safe to spread more, even if we could. But I’m In no hurry, Mr. Erie—I’m in no hurry. We’ve plenty of grub and water aboard, and I’m quite content to nbide in these latitudes awhile longer; for it is hereabouts —or, if not hereabouts, a bit further south —that I expect to light on the 'Santa An na.”’ "Von old idiot!” I was going to say; but hot wanting to hurt the foolish fellow’s feelings or fall out with him, I merely fisked why on earth he expected to find the reasure-shlp in that particular spot, es •ecially as we did not know within a thous and miles whore we were. “We ere In the doldrums," he answered, doggedly; “there can It;-no doubt about that: and I have always saUl as U the ‘Santa Auna' was not cast away—and I don’t think she was cast away—I have al ways said ns she was somewhere in the doldrums; and 1 am sure I am right." This was conclusive, and I could only say that I hoped we should sight the “Santa Anna" soon, and find her treasure aboard. “Oh, we shall find the treasure, euro enough! What would bo the use of eight lug her it we didn't?" CHAPTER XII.—BEFOGOEDl As may be supposed, life on the becalmed vessel was not particularly amusing. We | had not much to talk about, and ont of ] his own liue old Tom was os ignorant as I an infant There were, fortunately, plenty | of books on lioard—at least a hundred of i them being Action—and I spent much of I my time in readlug, and studying, as well i as I could with the menus at my disposal, ! the theory of navigation. Then I wrote up t he log-book, or ruther. made an entry in it every day, for there was very little to set down. Had I not done so I should have lost count of time, so like was one day to another. Now and then I went into the engine-room, and by getting up steam, starling and stopping the engine, I famil iarized myself with Its working. After awhile, I became a fairly expert engineer, and bad onr coal bunkers not been so nearly empty, I should have shipped the screw anil steamed In the direction whither I thought lay the nearest laud. Bolsover pottered about the ship, mend ed sails, spliced ropes, washed the decks, smoked, and slept; yet he got very weary, und one dny proposed that, by way of di version, we should make war on the rats. I asked how ho would do It, seeing that we bad neither cats, traps, dogs, nor ferrets. “I will make the beggars drown them selves,” he said. Ami then he disclosed bis plan. Rats, he explained, cannot live without water, and this was the reason why there were so many of thorn about the water-tanks, where they slaked their thirst by licking up the drippings and droppings. But as there was so much less water drawn than form erly, there wore fewer drippings, and the rats being for that reason extremely dry, water would make n splendid bait. All that was necessary would be to take buck ets, put a few inches of water at the bot tom—mixed with molasses to prevent them from jumping out—flx long strips of wood on the sides, so balanced that when the juts ran along them to get at the water they would full iuto the buckets. _ "very well,” I saul; "try It But In my opinion the less you have to do with the rats the hotter. If they have not got the fever—I wish they had—they can give It” "Oh, 1 have no fear. I shall not take the fever. I never thought I should. Besides, that storm must have blown it all out of the ship.” So Tom arranged his buckets, put them down in the hold near the water-tanks, and a waited the result with great expecta tions. An hour later he came up in great glee, bringing one of his buckets. “Look here!” he exclaimed. "And there’s more in the others.” In the boilom of the bucket was a writh ing imiss of rats. The water had not been deep enough to drown all of them, and the survivors, entangled in the molasses, were lighting desperately over the bodies of their j comrades. “Poor wretches!” I said. “Pat themout of their misery, Tom!” “Poor wretches! Put them out of their miseryl I would rather put them into a bit more. Icn’t it them os did all the mis chief? But here goes! I’ll chuck them into the water and let the sharks catch ’em —if they can. They’ll be well met.” : And with that Tom went to the taffrail, < and turned the bucket upside-down, where- ; upon all the rats, dead and alive—all save one, a fierce-looklng, gray-whiskered vet- I eran, which contrived to cling to the side— fell pell-mell into the sea. “Get out, you big devil!” said the boat swain, seizing it by the tail. But instead of getting out, the rat twist ed round and fixed its long, sharp teeth into its captor’s thumb. Tom dropped the bucket like a hot potato, and catching the i creature by the neck, choked it oft, and ' sent it spinning. { “By-, it hurts!” he exclaimed, pop ping the wounded thumb into his mouth. | "You had better go and bathe it with hot water,” I said. “Bat-bites ore nasty things “I don’t think it*s worth while. I’ll put a bit of pitch on it. It’s the best plaster I know. I never thought a rat could bite so keen. That gray-whiskered beggar’s teeth were like pins and needles.” j The incident made the boatswain more 1 Inveterate against the rats than ever. He j converted all the buckets in the ship into traps, and by sunset he had caught several dozens. He took care, however, before j throwing them overboard, to see that they j were properly drowned, and even then he handled the bucket in such a way as to prevent any possibility of a second bite. I But the rats, though they perished, had their revenge. The next morning Bolso ver was very ill. The thumb was inflamed 'and exceedingly painful, and he had all the appearance of sickening for yellow fev er. I was seriously alarmed, for, despite his craze about the ‘‘Santa Anna,” old Tom was a thorough seaman und a very . good fellow. You cannot be thrown much j with a man (at any rate. I cannot) without getting to like him—unless he is absolute- | ly repulsive—and I hod got to like the ; boatswain. Besides, what would become : of me if I should be left alone on board a | big ship in mid-ocean, utterly ignorant of my whereabouts, only just able to steer, and hardly knowing one sail from another? If it were possible to keep old Tom alive, I meant to do it, although, judging by my recent experience, the odds against his re- j covery were hundreds to one. On the oth er hand, the very fact that he had remained I bo long invulnerable showed that he pos- I sessed great resisting power, and rendered it probable that he would make a tougher 1 fight for his life than the others had done, i The first thing was to get my patisnt to ' keep his bed, which for a time he obstln- j ately refused to do. To confess that he | was ill would not only have touched his j pride and made his boastings look rather j ridiculous, but would have gone far to j falsify his predictions. So he pretended that his illness was a mere passing indis position—“a bit of a headache”—made light of his swollen thumb, and insisted on getting up and helping to prepare break fust. But the strongest will cannot long bear np under severe local pain and the all-per vading agonies ot fever, and it was not long before Bolsover confessed himself beaten, and took to his lied. “I never thought I should bo ill,” ho murmured, “hut it won’t be much. I shall be well in a day or two, I know I shull. Yon were right, Mr. Erie; 1 shouldn't have meddled with them rats—hung ’em) I don’t earn how soon we get ontot this ship. ’ Then’s s cans on her; that's what It la. Then’s a curse on her." Torn must have been very bad to own himself lu the wrong. It waa an evil sign, and made me almost despair of his recov ery. "I had lately rend a second time, to some lnstnuces a third time, the medical books In the captain’s cabin, and the knowledge thus acquired, and my own observation, had given me certain Ideas no to tnatment ot yellow fever, which I now proceeded to ptit into practice. Medicine having pro duced no effect in previous cases,. 1 deter mined to try something else. One of the most characteristic symptoms ot the malady is intense bent, the patient’s temperature being often as high os one hundred and seven degrees. I presumed, though I did not know for certain, that this was owing to an arrest of perspiration. The main point, therefore, was to make my patient sweat; so I rolled him In a wet sheet, then put a pile ot blankets on tbe top of him, and made him drink about a gallon of hot water. I kept him In tbs pack for hours, and when I unpacked him, washed him all over with salt water. This operation I repeated several times in suc cession, and always whon the fever got worso and his skin became hot and dry. I do not presume to say that I cured Bolso ver, for the Illness ran its course: but, at any rate, lie recovered, and that is what none of the others did. The fever may, however, have been of a milder typo than theirs, and it is of course quite possible that he would havo got better in any case, and did actually get better, not because of, hut in spite of, my treatment. But my patient thought otherwise, lie quite be lieved I hud cured him. said that he owed me bis life, and, lathe fullness of his heart, protested that, whether I helped him to find the "Santa Anna” or not, he should give me half her cargo of gold and silver. “Thunk you, Tom,’’ I said, laughing. “I’ll take it, with all my heart; and it will he the biggest fee over paid to a quack doc tor since the world began, and that is say ing a great deal.” j "There is nothing to laugh at,” an swered the boatswain, who could never bear being chaffed about hiscraze. "There is nothing to laugh at, and I’ll make a man j of you yet, Mr. Erie; never fcnrl You will' be the richest mnu iu Liverpool one of these days.” I ■out mm uui ncii gei iHMier euner very soon or very easily. He lay in his ham mock three weeks, and rose from it a yel low-skinned, lantern-jawed ghost, hardly able to put one leg before the other. | “I shall not be of much use when the change comes,” he said, as I supported him to a Southampton chair, under an awning we had rigged up a short time be* fore he fell ill. I “What change?" I "Change of weather, to be sure. And It Is bound to come soon. How long have we been here?" j "we have been becalmed five weeks; but as to how long we have been here I would not venture to offer an opinion. I am not sure whether we are herel” “You are getting beyond me, now, Mr. Erie. Not sure whether we are herel Where else should we be?" “I mean tliat we are moving. At any rate, 1 think so. I happened this morning to throw a cork overboard at the stern, and now it is at the bowB.” "There must be a current, then." "It looks so; and if the cork, moves so must the Bhip, though not so fast.” "You may soon find out whether she moves. Make a trial with the log." "A happy thought! It never occurred to me. I will do it at once." And I did. The "Diana" was progres sing through the water at the rate of a knot an hour. I “If we have been going at this speed all along for the last five weeks," I said, mak ing a rapid mental calculation, "we have done eight hundred and forty miles.” "I don’t think we have been going at this speed all along. When I fell ill it was as dead a calm as it could be. and as hot as blazes. And now it is cooler—I am sure it is cooler. Don’t you think so?" | “I kuow it is. I look at the thermome ter every day, and the average temperatura is from seven to ten degrees lower than if was a fortnight slnr-°,” TO BE CONTINUED. Sorrowful Stugglns’ “Corpse Cure." Curb and Corridor of the St. Paul Pioneer Press has nn aunt who lives in one of the four—points of the compass —divisions of the pretty city of Brook field. Mass., and the old lady, who has a keen sense of humor, loves to dilate upon the queer people whom she has for neighbors, and some of their odd sayings and doings. Here are a couple of her anecdotes: *'I had n female acquaintance who lived at the foot of the hill in North Brookfield, on whose slope was a small graveyard. At the bottom of the slope was the well which supplied her with water. One dav a friend from Boston, a doctor, visited her, and when he took a walk aftij dinner was horrified nt discovering the dire possibilities of the drainage from the location of the tombs into the well. He rushed into the house to remonstrate, but after he had told his horrible tale all the womau said was: •••Oh, I reckon ’twon’t hurt me nnv. Thom’s nios'lv ray relations that’s buried up yonder.’ ••We used to call him Sorrowful Stuggins. because he took on so when his first wife died. He built a vault on his own plnee—it was nigh the skirts oi Brookfield lie lived—and had her body put iu it so that the coffin could easily be seen. But Stuggins got tired of loneliness after a couple of years oi widowering. and married a* woman from a neighboring farm. The second wife had a temper of her own. and it wasn’t long before she gave Stuggins a taste of it. So what did that man do but go to an undertaker and got a glass top put in his first wife’s coffin. Then when number two got cantank erous he'd lead her to the vault and push her down over the opening, say ing: j •••There, you cross-grained female, take a look at the only woman I ever loved.’ ••It dUln’t take many doses of that '■ sort of medicine to take pretty much all the cantanker out of the number two, aud we used to call it the ‘corpso cure.’” They had weddinj; cake five and twen ty years old at a New York marriage anniversary the other day. It had been kept in stone jars. Rudvard Kipling has been proposed for Tennyson's successor as poet laureate on account of his anti-Irish doirgereL " hi He "IiIipiI tn Avoid lli "There come* Fiiklns. Let'* go around the bloc*. '* •■Wiuu'* the matterP Had a quar rel with him?" ••Oh. no; we're the belt of friends." * Owe him money?" "Not a cent,” "Think he wants to borrow?” "No; he always has money." "Always has a hard story to tell, perhaps?" ■•Never knew him to tell one In all the years I have known him.” ••Weil, why In the world don't you want to meet him?” "He has a baby that Is always say ing bright things.”—Chicago.Tribune. CONDUCTOR K. D. LOOMIS. DetroltMlcb., says: “The elfcct of lull’s Catanh Cure Is wonderful.” Write him about It. Sold by Druggists, 78c. About Lice. Two hard kinds of lice to fight are the very small gray lice and the little red ones. These stay on tho roosts and chicken houses in the day time, and fairly swarm on tiio fowls at night. Worst of nil they are so very small us scarcely to be seen, and a house may be fairly overrun before their presence is detected. W atch closely; uuce your roosts out into the sunlight and look on the underside. Kerosene will dis patch these, but at from l’.i to 35 cents u gallon it is loo expensive. Crude petroleum will answer, but it can't ul ways be hud. The most economical method, both of time and cash, is to save all the strong soap suds after washing, re-heat it boiling hot und scald the roosts and every nook and corner of the house. —Denver Chickou. Tty ms rnp.il ty ami noctmtcy In mlrtl lion, S'. L. Jenkins recently soi'iit'cil mi excellent position in lies Moines, la. B’red attended Elliott's iluniucss Col lege, Uurlinglon, la. Another Tint. The Czar—"A horrible thought strikes nje!” The Lord High Executioner— • *\Vhat is ibut, your Majesty?" The Czar—-If that dentist was a nihilist he may have filled my teeth with dynamite. Then, the first time I bile hard I shail blow the lop of my head off!”—ruck. American Poets have now an oppor unity of nlunlng one of the 41 prizes, $10.00 to • 100.00. offered by The Ksterbrook Steel Pen Co., art John St.. New York for poems on their pens. Write them for circulars. Pnron lllrsch dresses with the utmost simplicity. Life is sinner in the valleys and lowlands tl.uu tmoi g the lolls ami mountains. Axyoxe would he justified in recom mending Beechum's Piiis for all affections of the liver and other vital organs. Churche* built lu America in 1S91 num bered S,fjUS Mr*. Winslow's SoothlngNyrop, for Chll dremucthinc, softetts thopum*. reducestntfntimiu *ton. chars pula. cures wind cuitc. Sec. a bottle. > According to ancient tradit on Moses wrote the Book of Job at TO. Conglilsiic Lends to Consnmptlon. Kemp’s Balsam will stop the cough at ones. Go to your druggist today and get s sample bottle free. 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A perfect rem edy for Dlzzineaa,Nauaae Drowaineea, Bad Tante lu the Mouth. Coated Tongue,Pain In the Bide. TORPID LIVER. Tbej regulate the Bowola. Purely Vegetable. Price 1ft Genu. GAMES VESZOQTZ 00., NBW70AE. Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. wife wrirMAnmnuR flfJBuvi a KU.001apmM OihH IUni (#14 MaebkMi |m funait for • JMM. a«7 •llrMlftM Mr hutan, and mt* Mm ut IMII l>r«et. «M Kw m*i CATAI'^n*. OSrOOD ■PQ.UO.o Uapi. AO. CIIUIMUL the Famona Little Pill ft ferronatlpatlnn.RIck Head ache, Dyapepalu.Xu Nuuaeu.No ruin. Very famuli RUPTURE » CURED 0" NO PAT i;?cZc*■ National Bank of Commerce, "nk^ Inv-etleaie our Method. Written Guarantee to absolutely Cure all kinds of HU 1**1 tlltli of both Sexes, without the use of knife o. syringe, n^ matter Of how long standing. k.X .4 *i IN AXIOM kit KB. Send lor t. ircular. Address THE O. E. MILLElt COMPANY, , 807*808 M. V. Hie Bonding, - OJIAHA, NEBRASKA. , tPat’d by A. O',ALBERT »t.Lo«l».Ho.i Igj.f . SAFE. DURABLE FENCE: 0RL1 fSO PER HU. i?“!Airt). owmftg-mbjgagg £ Agents-*.": S";.".™ Cash n\ The beat local and traveling Mer.u wanted every where. Write at once for circular* and choice ter ritory ; addreaaA. G. Hulbart. Patentee, earn of tssirws I Factory Catalogue with MOengraved deslana ant t rloe*. *er.t free to any who want fancy Iron and wire work or eltr. cemetery and farm fenoaa.ew INTERNATIONAL SANITARIUM i -TREATS ALL CLASSES OF CHRONIC, PRIVATE and NERVOUS DISEASES MALE OR FEMALE PILES, FISTULA, FISSURE and STRICTURE ollba RECTUM Permanently Cured with* ‘ cut tha use of KNIFE, LIGATURE or CAUSTIC. Also ECZEMA and ULCERATION of the REC. . TbM Successfully Treated. No detention from business if palienls are capable of work previous to treatment Good board and rooms for patients. QUESTION BLANKS and BOOK ‘ ‘ on DISEASES Mailed Freo on Application. INTERNATIONAL SANITARIUM, Mixtfcenth and Howard 8ls.» »». W. C. MAIWIIM,, Preeldeat. OMAHA, NKDUA8KA. CAITTIOK.— Tlcvnre of drnlmnW tlfuiiag Rhoes ' ■ * *”* " “ - toes wit boot W. L. lloagli name and the price RtainjpedOD bottoi •Aicfc MubsticnTtonM aYe**jfra a dale nYan 4 •abject to prosecution by law for ob taining money un der faUc pretences. W. L. DOUGLAS FOR GENTLEMEN. :akb «o A teinlie flawed sbaetbAt will not rip t floeuu; smooth inside, flexible, more comfortable, stylish and durable than out other shoo over sold at the price, custom-made shoe:* costing from 14 to $5. Equals The only 93*90 Hhoe made with two complete •elca, securely sewed at the outside edge (os shown in eat). V which gives double the wear of cheay welt shoes sold at th< leedge (as shown In eat). ~~t welt shoes sold at the ng onlyone sole sewed same price, for such easily rip, L____ „_ to a narrow strip of leather oo the edge, and when Q worn through are worthless. The two eole.of the WTY,. DOUGLAS 83.00She. when worn through can bo repaired as many times an. ••9*b®7 will never rip or loose a from the upper. Purchasers of footv/oar desiring to econo miic, should consider the superior qualities and cot be influenced of these shoe3, c_„__ to buy cheap welt shoes 3old at S&OQL. having only appearance to commends them. W. L ooKiLAM Men'* 94 and 95 Hue Calf, Haud 94 and *3 _, _ Sewed ; *3.3 3 Police and Farm 9.50 Pino Calf; m-AsI* •uu BX.UU ** - t*.oo __ 1 School ShoesrfJjMiiea* _Ip Beat Duncolm, are of thesame lilnlh. •tamlard of merits *0> _WII stre azelaitT* aale taehee iralin and crneral Merchants wl 'here I have tarsus NOW 13 THE TIME TO TRY A 8AM PI. K PAIR OP EIBEENDiLL, JONES & CO.’S OWN MAKE They are warranted and made hy Skilled Workmen, of the beet Selected Stock. ABK YOUK IIKAI.ER FOR Roods manufactured by us and lake no others. It will pay you to investigate by a trial. IIREINDALL, JONES & CO., OMAHA. NKIIRAAKA. lioWt.TO OnmiN ,i - ' > . tts* 7 - :* w®/* •• /'(tM.i.-i- ,r».| |jiit CiipiUiiims.) i t - ■ 3l'NI> V,I>H. . KOCH & CO'S • ,.*v» ILLUSTi^ATHp *' fakSHION CXTAf.f )UUK v.v.'^flc