The Plattsmoutfi Journal O. B. MANX. W. K. FOX, Publishers. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA The Khedive of Egypt recently sent ft present to Pope Leo XIII. In the shape of a mummy, dating back to two thousand years before the Christian era. A movement Is on foot In North Carolina, prompted by the tobacco dealers, to erect a statue of Sir Walter Raleigh in Raleigh. Collection boxes are to be placed In stores where to bacco is sold. A line of "observation automobiles ,s to be run In Washington, D. C, for '.he benefit of visitors. Each vehicle arries twenty-two passengers and will be accompanied by a lecturer on points of interest at the capital. The fuel is kerosene and the motive power steam. Dr. S. J. Trexle of Kutztown, Pa before his death, provided that every one who attended his funeral should have a free dinner, and over 1,000 persons availed themselves of his of fer at the two leading hotels, where arrangements had been made to feed the multitude. A New York newspaper recently celebrated its fiftieth birthday by bringing out a copy of Its first issue. That number contained, among many musty and forgotten things, an arti cle on the Xicaraguan canal route, ex tracts from English papers on the su periority of American yachts, and an article on the sympathy of Americans with the Cubans, oppressed by Spain. Verily, "the thoughts we are think ing our fathers did think." An American laundry machine com pany has recently shipped a complete steam laundry plant to Vladivostok, eastern Siberia. It will be capable of handling four thousand pieces of lin en a day, and will consist of wash ers, centrifugal wringers and a large mangle. This is said to be the first Introduction of such an equipment In to that region. If so. it is doubtless a case of "Wring out the old; wring in the new." slightly to amend Ten nyson's familiar linei The "Donan Zeitung.' a Bavarian newspaper, give? currency to the ru mor that the Kaiser has instructel Ihe military authorities to remit all sentence's passed on .soldiers of the L'hina expeditionary fore?. His Majes ir. It is said, does not wish that the .nea who went voluntarily to China to light for the . Fatherland shall return t.ome to undergo punishment. Quite large number of soMiers of the Ger man forces have been sentenced to more or less heavy punishment for fiffenses against military discipline committed in China and for excesses tgainst the person and property of the Chinese. When Emma Paul was called as a witness in court in Baltimore, Md., In a suit brought by her father against her mother, the astonishing facts were disclosed that, although she is aged twenty years, she did not understand the nature of an oath, had never been to a church or Sunday school, had never heard of God. or heaven, and did not know of the promise of im mortality. It was discovered that the young woman had lived in Baltimore all her life, and that her home was in the heart of a densely populated section. Judge Wickes allowed her to testify, saying she was an extraordin ary and unsatisfactory witness. The street car companies of Chicago are apparently not in high favor with the Service committee of the commit tee on local transportation of the city council, for it nas formulated a code, that 13 likely to reduce the receipts ol the railroad companies considerably. The committee at a meeting cecided that If a passenger is obliged to stand up in a car ard han? on to a stra he has received value for only four cent3, ana not five. Then the com mittee has suggested to the corpora tion counsel to ecforc? an ordinance relative to transfers, making It obli gatory on the traction companies to furnish transfer clips to any of its inter sec tipg lines. An Interesting operation has Just been performed in the hospital attached to the University at Halle, Germany. A 6-year-old girl patient was suffering from partial paralysis and as the doc tors in charge considered this conld only arise from a tumor on the brain. Prof, von Bramann decided to remove it. With an electric saw he cut out a piece of the skull a little larger than a half-crown, cut through the Inner kin, and discovered a tumor as large as a walnut. The professor kilfully removed this tumor, sewed up the in ner skin, fitted in again the round piece of the skull he had sawn out. and sewed up the outer skin. The cpration lasted an hour, and may be considered perfectly successful, as the child is quite well again and all symp toms of paralysis have disappeared. At the request of fri.?uus and ad mirers of Dr. Armand Hansen, the dis coverer of the bacillus of leprosy, the Norwegian sculptor Visdal made a bust of him. which was unvellod the other day. on the occasion of Hansen's six tieth birthday. Professor Lassar de livered an address. In which he re marked that it had taken the world a quarter of a century to fully realize the Import of Dr. Hansen's discovery, but that already, in consequence of it. great improvement had been effected In Norway, long one of the favorite haunts of that terrible disease. Mrs. Mary Haberlin of McKeesport. Pa., gave her husband what she thought castor oil, but wa3 instead carbolic acid. . He died three Lours later. He came home sick and asked his wife to give him a tMospoonfuI of the oil. The room was dark and she did not realize her mistake until her husband fell upon the floor in agony. She was alone, and before a physician arrived he was beyond Leip. Mrs. Haberlin went nto 'convulsions and her physicians fear Ebe may die j of the shoe: As I took upon the changes that the pass ing years have wrought At the bent and shrunken figrure, comes a saddened, reverent thought. How the wearied feet, slow passing, pierced by stones on life's rough road. Soon shall gain a heavenly portal, finding rest at last with God. Mother, o'er your faded features rests a light more bright to me Than the brightest ray of sunlight shin ing on the distant sea! For It tells of battles conquered pa tience, hope, denial sweet While the grave smite round your lip.", dear, makes the picture quite com plete. AY'ords e'en fail mo. now. to toll you all the love within my heart: Deepest thoughts are ever silent, though of l'fi- the better part. All unworthy as I am, dear, of your life long sacrifice. Still my beacon star shines brightly from your faded, tear-dimmed eyes. Only when your hands are folded on a cold and pulseless breast. And your still form in its casket speaks a soul in perfect rest Will your spiiit. on white pinions, hover ing o'er your lonely child. See upon my heart deep graven, your own features, soft and mild. Kate li. Adams. The Spell Broken. BY MARY MARSHALL PARKS. (Copyright. 1901. by Daily Story Pub. Co.) "Anderson says he met you on the avenue yesterday, but he was not sure that you recognized him," said Jack, with a troubled look in his honest eyes. I am delighted to hear it." an swered Madge, with a trill of gay laughter. "That was precisely the state of mind that I wished to produce. but I was not certain I had acquired the necessary manner. I believe my education is now complete. What an unsophisticated creature I was a year ago: " "I liked the old Madge best." said Jack, bluntly. Did you?" said Madge, indifferent ly. "But what a goose I was! I had so many illusions. I believed in so many things and so many people, al most everything and everybody, I think, absurd as it seems." I had hoped you would always be kind to my friends, Madge. Anderson Is no carpet-knight; but he is an hon est man and a good fellow." That was simply one of your little misapprehensions." replied Madge. lightly. "I shall always choose my own friends." I did not mean that you should make my friends yours in the nearest sense. That would be unreasonable. said Jack gravely. "AH I ask is com mon civility." That also is at my own discretion," retorted Madge wilfully. I could never cut any one except for the gravest reasons." said Jack, soberly. "I never cut any one In my fe but Dick Foster." "Dick Foster? And what has he dons to incur your displeasure?" Madge asked, with a bright, hard look. You know that Ella Parsons Is in the insane asylum and you know why," said Jack, sternly. "He ought not to be received In decent society." Madge's face grew still harder. "It may as well be understood once for all that I shall recognize whom I please, and when and where I please," she said, icily. "That is a matter in which I would not be guided by the Prince of Good Form himself." "And who is that?" asked the aston ished Jack. "Dick Foster," she responded with another hard glance. Jack rose unsteadily. He was not going to quarrel with Madge just then. He was not fit. For days he had been aware that his head and legs were a little queer. Nothing serious, he said to himself, as he descended the steps; and yet his feet were still unsteady and his head curiously light. It would have been easy for him to give Madge up had he not firmly be lieved that the sweet-souled, dewy eyed girl who had won his heart still dwelt somewhere within that cold and wordly exterior, J'.ke a orlncess shut In a tower, watting for some bold "And who Is that?" knight to release her from the spell of the enchanter. "1 fear I'm not the knight." he thought sadly, as he walked heavily down the street; and still, he could not decide to give her up not Just yet. "Jack Downing Is downed at last." said some would-be wit among the swaying figures on the ball room floor. "Brain fever." The words drifted Into the conserva tory where Madge was sitting, and for a moment she thought the lights had gone out. Then they blazed up again with ten-fold brilliancy, and at the same time the white light of reason and common sense that bad been so long obscured In the girl's soul flashed out with all Its old power, shattering to atoms the shell of worldllness .and scepticism which had closed around mm J her heart. Seeing that Dick Foster was scan ning her with a look of cool curiosity. she composed her face and summoned up all the self-control she possessed. "I will go home now. If you please. Mr. Foster," she said coldly. "He has simply been overworked, my dear child," the old doctor repeat ed, soothingly. "As you know, his father was obliged to go to Europe for a prolonged vacation; and that threw the whole responsibility of the busi ness on the boy. He has carried the weight nobly for one so young; but I warned him weeks ago that be was overdoing, and must slacken his pace. "It Is the old Madge, dear." I suppose he couldn't see his way clear to do it. He has a trained nurse and the best of care, and we'll pull him through all right." Although Madge went home con vinced that she bad flattered herself too much in thinking that her Insig nificant doings had brought about Jack's illness, she was not entirely re assured. Even if she had added little to the load he had been carrying, she had done nothing to lighten it, and she might have done so much. She had not dreamed it was so heavy. "Ana wnue ne was toiling like a slave, you you were flirting with Dick Foster," she said contemptuously to the pale face that confronted here as she took the fading flowers from her hair and shook down the shining coils. Jack's hands lay like withered leaves on the snowy coverlet, and the wan, shriveled face on the pillow seemed hardly human, but his eyes were bright with returning life and dawning hope. "Has the princess escaped from the tower at last? Is it really the old Madge?" he whispered, doubtfully. "It Is the old Madge, dear," she answered, tears and smiles struggling for the mastery of her mobile face, in spite of the doctor's injunction as to excitement. "Mr. Anderson is down stairs. We are the best of friends now and he brought me here. Shall I tell him to come up?" "Not just yet." said Jack, happily studying the face bent over him. and finding in it all he had so loved and more. The cynical curl of the lips was gone, the dewy freshness had come back to the eye3, and brought with it a sweet, grave womanliness that had never been there before. "It is worth far, far more -than a brain fever costs," he said at last, with a sigh of satisfaction. Turned the Table. A lecturer was once decanting on the superiority of nature over art, when an Irreverent listener in the au dience fired that old question at him: "How would you look, sir, without your wig?" Young man," instantly re plied the lecturer, pointing his finger at him, "you have furnished me an apt illustration for my argument. My bald ness can be traced to ihe artificial hab its of our modern civilization, while the wig I am wearing" here he raised his voice till the windows shock "is made of natural hair!" The audience testified Its appreciation of the point by loud applau.se and the speaker was not interrupted again. Law (Salt Over Mourt'i Skull. Word comes from Vienna that a lawsuit has begun between the bor oughs of Salzburg and Mood ling as to which is the rightful possessor of Mo zart's skull. Mozart died In 1791, and was burled near Vienna. The grave digger of the cemetery stole his skull and the grave digger's son sold it to Professor Hyrtl, who died in 1894. After the professor's death the skull disappeared and it has just been found again. Every sinner is a suicide. ABOUT VANILLA. A riant Esteemed for It Flaror an Aroma, The vanilla is an orchidaceous climbing vine, which often reachef over 30 feet in height, and Is usually about the thickness of one's little fin ger. The vine is round, knotted at in tervals, and covered with dark green spear-shaped leaves. It throws out a number of thin arms or aerial roots a? it rises, which, attaching themselves tc neighboring trees, appear to derive therefrom such nutriment that the vines are little dependent on the soil in fact, often when all other modes of supply are cut off these holdfasts will entirely nourish the plant. Occasional ly the wild vines completely cover the branches of the tre3. and, running from it into adjacent ones, they will hang in huge festoons and arches so thick that they seriously impede one's progress In the bush. The vines blos som profusely usually ia the spring the strange and delicate flowers, with their long, straggling and pale yellow petals, springing from the angles where the leaves branch off. After a few days' existence, the flowers wither and fall, and as their chance of fertili zation through any of the outside agencies oh which they depend Is a brief one, and precarious at best, it is not surprising to find that very few of them are succeeded by fruit. This takes the form of a large pod. and. strange to say, although the pods at tain their full growth within - fifty days from the fall of the petals, they take fully seven months more to ripen. The pods vary from 5 to 12 inches in length and are about like a banana, but are better described as resembling a knife sheath; hence the name vanilla, which is a corruption of the Spanish word vainilla a small scab bard. Each pod contains a quantity of small black granules, surrounded by a balsamic nuln whose rjecullar com bination of oil and acid is supposed to impart to the pods that delicious flavor and powerful aroma for which they are so Justly esteemed. Chambers' Journal. A CO-OPERATIVE CCLONY. An Example Is the Settlement of Cosine In Paraguay. comparatively few persons are aware of the existence in Paraguay of a little Enelish-sneakine colony named Cosme, and of its attempt to organize a community on the highest co-operative lines. Beginning in 1894 as the result of a secession from the New Australia colony, the founders of Cosme seem to have steered clear of the shoals and quicksands which wrecked the parent movement. One of the fathers" of the colony, al though he is quite a young man. is John Lane, who says of the colony: "We are running now on the linea on which New Australia started; we are communistic in so far as we share our earnings equally, irrespective of the capacity of the individual. The present outlook Is highly satisfactory. but we want more adult members. Our present population is sixteen women, all married, and twenty-six men; forty-two all told, exclusive of the chil dren. We have 15,000 acres of land, half forest and half pasture, but only the forest land is good for cultivation. In the matter of finance our assets ex ceed our liabilities, and that is gener ally considered to be a sound position. We can easily raise our own food sup ply. Every family lives in its own house, and the bachelors have houses of their own, but take tbeJk meals at the co-operative dining-room, their cooking being done for them by col ony labor. This co-operative com monwealth Is governed by what Is called a parliament, although it is on ly a committee of three, with a chair man or director of the colony. The ballot is taken by casting papers into a hat. Speaking of the industrial con ditions in Cosme, Mr. Lane said re cently: "We have a forty-five hours' week, eight hours a day for five days and five hours on Sat urday. Work start3 just after sunrise and the men are em ployed in sugar-making and timber work. The married women are not on the organized working staff. They look after the homes, and any work they do outside 13 voluntary. Single wom en would be on the working staff." A Touching Tribute. The most touching compliment ever received," remarked a well known soprano the other day, "was paid to me by a poor old woman, who must have amused those who heard her. I had sung two so'os at the evening serv ice of a fashionable church, after which I bearded a car. The old wom an, whose clothes indicated great pov erty, got in and sat down beside me, her face fairly shining with pleasure as she recognized me. 'Lady, I want to tell you how I likes your voice,' she exclaimed in rather broken English. It goes right to my heart, and makes me so happy, just as If I'd heard the angels sing. I thanks you.' Of course I thanked her, but the funny part was when the conductor came for our fares. The old lady counted out ten pennies before I could pass over ray nickel. Two! two! she said to him as she nodded to me. I wants to, lady, for I likes your voice so much; I likes your voice.' So while I felt that per haps the poor old soul could ill spare her extra pennies, I let her make the sacrifice because of the evident pleas ure it gave her, and no compliment I ever received has touched me more deeply than her oft repeated words: T likes your voice.' " Philadelphia Record. Salisbury a a Hulnt. ii 13 not generally Known tnat a statue of Lord Salisbury as a Christian warrior appears In one of the niche of the interesting and beau'.Kul reredos in the chapel of All Souls' College, Ox ford. About forty years ago the pre mier was elected a fellow of this col lege, and about the same time nn elab- orato stone screen was erected In the chapel attached to the Fellows' house. The sculptor evidently preferred tc make his own saints Instead of accept ing those canonized by the church, and Lord Salisbury was chosen to fill up the vacant gap, and Is therefore im mortalized as a Christian warrior. I Chicago Journal. A Wonderful Apple To have the memory of John Grant, who brought to Ma'ne a remarkable distinction a half century ago, the farmers of Waldo and Kennebec coun ties of the Tine Tree state are to hold celebrations in the several towns of the countryside. Grant was looked upon as a harmless crank when he was alive, fame coming years after he was dead. The story goes that he was the son of an Irish soldier who dsserted from the British army during the Revolutionary war and married a half breed Indian squaw, fiom which union many of the Grants In the east are said to have descended. The elder Grant was part lumberman, part farm er and more than half hunter, getting a precarious living from many callings and dying a week after he received no tice that a pension had bsen granted him for his servicss in the war of 1812. John Grant, the son, inherited more than 1,000 acres of land and a lot of bad habits from his father. Invented a New Apple. John Grant's only claim to fame lies in the fact that he Invented a new breed of apples in the days when he was given over to sin. Most new and desirable varieties of apples are pro duced by planting the seeds of the natural fruit, and s leeting the best result of many plantings as the tree from which scions should be cut. Grant's method of begetting a new fruit was wholly different from any thing that was then known, because he may be said to have whittled out his apple tree with a pocket knife, thereby perfoiming a feat that even Nature at her best had never attempt ed. About 200 acres of Grant's farm were in orchards, which yielded him great quantities of cider, for which there was a good market. He could grow and harvest all the sour fruit he cared to use but when he tried to raise sweet apples, of which he wa3 very fond, the sailors who went past the foot of his orchard on coasting schooners, walked in by night and stole every sweet apple as fast as it was fit to eat, often breaking down the trees in their haste to secure at many as possible. Grant tried shot guns, steel traps, bull do?s and many kinds of profanity without effect. Then, after enduring many disappointments for five or six 6 8 ?AVORED BY : v A KING. Within the precincts of quaint old Bardstown Is situated one of the old est Catholic church buildings in Ken tucky. It was the first cathedral west of the Allegheny mountains and is a magnificent structure and is the only house of worship in America that boa&ts a bell presented by royalty. The interior in the magnificence of its ap pointments is not excelled by any church in the south.' It contains rare paintings by the oM masters, one alone the altar piece being valued at $100,- 000. This magnificent work of art is the production of Antwerp artist, Van Bre. It depicts the crucifixion and is pronounced by connoisseurs to be the most splendid work of Its class in the world. It is 21 feet in height and 12 feet in width, and was presented to Father Flaget, the first bishop of Ken tucky, by Louis Philippe, King of France. Another rare painting now worth its weight in gold Is ' The Mar tyrdom of St. Batholomew," by Van Dyke. This picture is catalogued in the list of the great artist's produc tion and its present location is also noted. The numerous smaller paint ings which the church contains were donations from the King of Italy.' But the most Interesting feature of the old church is its bell. This, too, was a gift from Louis Philippa. When that unfortunate monaich was driven from his throne in France he fled to Bardstown and sought the hospitality of Bishop Flaget, whom he had known in Europe. He was received with the utmost kindness, and shortly after his arrival, through the influence of the bishop, he was enabled to form a class In French, which he taught in a little building which is yet standing on St. Joseph's College ' grounds. Philippe was a grateful king and never forgot the many kindnesses rendered him by the good bishop. When he was re stored to his throne he pres;n'ed to the church the raintlng above described, together with the bell. This bell was broken in 1887 and was recast by Louisville bell founders. BEAVTEFUL Vi STOCKHOLM O, The good people of Stockholm are proud In the belief that the architec ture of that city is superior to that of any other of its size in Europe, says a traveling correspondent. There is an old. town and a new town. The former is very old and antiquated In appearance and the latter Is very new. The municipal regulations are severe and arbitrary. No material but stone and brick can be used; every stair way must be of iron; the cellar must i,o nrched: the walls must be very thick, according to the size and height of the house; the beams ana giruer must be of iron or steel and tne ai tic floor of tiles or terra cotta laid in concrete or cement, and form a fire proof wall between the roof and the rest of the house. There must De iron doors at certain places; if there Is an elevator shaft it must be of solid ma- sonry, ana me rum tt ou tiles, slate, or metal. Party walls must be at least eight inches thick, and thicker according as the height of the house increases, but the height cannot be greater than the width of the street . . . 1 n . a A r. mhtAli tpon wnicn tne uuuae oiuuua, nuiui Remarkable Ac complishment of a Maine Farmer. years, he swore a big oath that h would build an apple that should fooi the sailors and enable him to havt some sweet fruit In his cellar for the winter. Shuuned as the Evil One. The Indian blood in hi3 veins hac made Grant quick of observation and enabled him to learn things about na ture that are concealed from mosl men. He was led to believe that if h could split the scion from a sweet tre nd another scicn from a sout tree in halves, and place the half of s sweet scion against the half of a boui scion and make them fit so exactly that both sides wculd live if the were inserted in a healthy sto.-k. h would produce a fiuit that was soui on one side and sweet on the other. On trying the experiment he found that such a result was 'not possible from the terminal bud o' the twin scion, but all shoots further down the graft would yield sweet fruit on one side and sour fruit on the other. Thouci the terminal bud is hard to make live, Grant was successful in about one trial out of ten, and when his sour and sweet apples were found growing in the orchard, the builder of the fruit was pronounced as one possessed of Satan, and shunned by the truly good as If he had been an emissary from the pit. When it was done and his orchard was grafted to sweet and sour apples the sailors went to other orchards for their fruit, giving Grant time to attend prayer meeting, where he be came acquainted with a clergyman who wrought his reform. Indeed, Grant always declared that his conver sion was directly due to his ability to produce an apple that was proof against the sailors, because not only did the absence of the thieves enable him to go to the prayer meetings, but it was a fact that a man who could not swear had no business with an or chard infested with nocturnal thieves. Italy Leads In Crematories. Although the Pope pronounced against cremation in 1886. Italy now has more crematories than any other country, according to the Flamme, the German periodical devoted to this sub ject. 0 -K-Ov-ltC Church in Bardstown, K'y., A Has Gifts of I Louis Philippe of France. 9 The recasting was a complete success, and In order to retain for it Its his toric surroundings the same metal was used. The old bell is one of the most mu sical in America and when the at mosphere Is c!ear Its tones can b3 dis tinctly heard for 10 miles. Bishop Potter's Ready Wit. When a young minister of high church tendencies was called to pre side over a congregation that abhorred ritualism, and was a stickler for the simplest of services, he called on Bishop Potter to ask what would be the result if he went in for ritualism just a bit. "Suppose I should burn a pastille or two during the service; what do you think would happen, bish op, for I dearly wish to try the experi ment?" "Your congregation would be incensed, your vestrymen would fume and you would go out In smoke," quickly replied the bishop. New York Times. Vine Culture in Chile. Vine culture and the production of wines has In recent year3 become an Important Industry in the republic of Chile. Lying as it does between the Andes mountains and the Faclfic ccean. and extending north and south for a distance of 2,400 mile3. Chile possesses conditions cf soil and cli mate that are admirably adapted to horticulture, and especially to the cul tivation of a variety of wine-producing grapes. Lnnent Hallway Hun Without Stop. England holds the record for the longest railway (regular) run without a stop. This is Paddington to fc,xeter 194 miles. France comes next, with Paris to Calais 1851 miles. Ameri ca's longest is New York to Troy 148 miles. Don't consider It smart to be flip pant. All men of brain3 despise a sil ly talker, and nice women shun them. The Swedish Capital has Most Admirable Arch itecture. . .... ... Is usually between 68 and SO feet. The houses vary from four to six stories. Only two thirds of the area of the lot can be covered, except on street corners, where three-fourths is al lowed. The remainder of the lot must be reserved for courts, for light and ventilation. All chimney flues must be 12 by 15 inches, and must be swept occe a montn rrom octoocr to April by official chimney sweepers. These regulations have made Stock holm a beautiful city, with imperish able buildings of a high class of archi tecture. Fires are few. In 1899, the last year for which I can obtain the statistics, there were 199 fires In Stockholm, and the total loss was only 243,232 kroner, about $70,000 in American money. Itecotucs Plain as Day. If it was difficult for Admiral Schley to coal at sea as it is for the most of us to coal on land, his expla nation should be accepted. Omaha World-Herald. Being depends on believing. the Presidential Kelt. Geographically considered, Mr Roosevelt's accession to power Is ia harmony with a tendency that has ex isted for more than four decades. Wittt the exreDtien of Andrew Johnson, ev ery president since 1856 has come from the states, which follow the southern shore the Great Lakes from New York to Illinois, inclusive. These flva 6tsies Nef Yoik, Pennsylvania, Ohio.., tediana aid Illinois rim in a line side by side. New York has furnished Arthur. Cleveland and Roosevelt; Pennsylvania, Buchanan; Ohio, Hayes, Garfield and McKinley; Indiana, Har rison, and Illinois, Lincoln and Grant. Her Kerve Saved Several Uvea, A year ago the husband of Mrs. Mary Hirsch, a New York woman, met with an injury that prevented hinv from attending to his work and also made bim subject to epileptic fits. Mrs. Hirsch is an expert needlewo man, and has been able to keep the family together, in spite of the fact that her husband had taken to drink. The other morning after a hard night's drinking, he arose from the breakfast table, drew a revolver from his pocket and said: "I am going to kill you alh" There was Insanity in his look, but Mrs. Hirsch remained perfectly cool. "Where did you get that pistol?" sh asked, pleasantly, as the madman, came toward her. He did not answer, but leveled the weapon at her head. The woman never flinched, but said in ever tones: "Now, Henry, if you oo that they will lock you up, and then you won't be able to get a drink at all." The maniac had been prepar ed for resistance, for terrified cries, for flgh for anything but this. Jt confused him and he muttered, "That's so," as lie put away the weapon and' left the house. Half an hour later he was on his way to the insane depart ment at Believue hospital. Mrs. Hirsch was terribly shaken by the ex perience, but soon recovered. THE CHAMPION WING SHOT. Cpt. Bor4a Uaa a Dangerous Excell ence but Comes Oat Unhurt. Ferris Wheel Park. Chlca$, Nor. 4th. Capt. A. 11. Bogardus. the cham pion wing shot of the world, has spent the summer here. His shooting school has been one of the features of the Park during the season. He has giv en many exhibitions and his skill with the rifle is superb. The Captain tells of a very close call he once had when living at Elk tart, 111. Ha had been a sufferer from Kidney disease for several years and It rapidly developed into Brlght's Dis ease. All his friends told him that this was incurable and that he would never get better. To say that he was alarmed is to put it very mildly. This plucky man had faced many dangers and it made him sick at heart to think that at last he was to be conquered by such a cruel foe. At last he heard of a medicine that had cured many such cases Dodd's Kidney Pills. He used them and was completely restored to good health. He 6ays: "I attribute my present good health to Dodd's Kidney Plll and to nothing else." Longsrlty of Tortoises. They say that the biggest Galanagos tortoise now in Bronx park. New York city, is at least 400 years old, and so must have been living when Columbus died. Dr. Hornaday, cf the New York Zoological society, rests his faith cn Walter Rothschild, of Lon don, who has a tortoise which he saya is much older than that, and Roth schild has made tortoises his special study, so that be is recognized as an expert. Largest In the World. Walter Baker & Co., Ltd., Dorches ter, Mass., are the largest manufactur ers of cocoa and chocolate in the world. They received a gold medal from the Paris exposition of last year. This year they have received three gold medals from the Pan-American exposition at Buffalo. Their goods are the standard for purity and excellence. The Smallest Piece of Real Estate. The smallest parcel of real estate in New York city is for sale. It is lo cated at the corner of Third avenue and East One Hundred and Forty ninth street, and the lot is 6x14 inches. A new building is going up on the corner and the people who are erecting it wanted the small lot. They offered $200 for the sit. Frederick Fhl. tlm owner, demands $1,000, and will very likely receive it. Plso's Cure for Consumption is an Infallible medicine tor coughs ana colds. X. W. Samcu Ocean Grove. N. J., Feb. 17. 1900. An imaginative writer is one who boasts of the prices he gets for his ar ticles. AtL CP-TO-DATE IIOr.SICKEEPERS Use Red Cross Boll Blue. It makes clothes dean and sweet as when new. All grocers. Pavirg experiments are to be made in Havana with vitrified brick, gran ite squares aud sandstone blocks. Brooklyn. N Y., Oct. 31st. After In vestigating Clarlield Tea, which is quit univf-rsally acknowledged to be th t 8t ' family remedy, It Is not difficult to ox .la,n-Jt5L.succ,'!,s,t 13 the nit-.iiciiie tor GOOD RESULTS! It Is prepared hero by the Oarlit-ld Tea Co.. in th. ir new and attractive laboratory and is made wholly ir?P.r,mp,e'' "Wt-et and withal. 11KALT11-JAr1,1"1',3- Carf'l Tea jS thft UKiUjAb herb cure for constipation, and sick headache. Envy is the lowest known form of praise. .Ladles Can Wear Shoe, One fdze smaller after using- Allen's Foot Kase, a powder. . It makes tight or nevr shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating-, aching- feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. All druggist, and. shoo stores 25c Trial package l'HKE by maiL Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leltoy, N. Y. The virtues u woman boasts of he celdom possesses. MORR Fl.r'XI HLI! AM LASTING, won't shak out or blow out; bv iislnar Ueliance March you obtain better " result than posslblo with nny otli.-r brand and one-third more for sumo money. The caterpillar and the glutton live to eat. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not stain the hands or tpot thi kettlo (ex cept green and purple). Sold bj'tlrug. gists, 10c per package. We attract hearts by the qualities we display; we retain them by the qualities we possess. Suard. Mrs. IVliiMow s (toothing- j-ra p. rorrhlldrrn tpett'Dg. snfira. the sums, reduces f 7 asuiuuuloa.aUsjt pain, cure Lud colic iUotbotU When a couple marry under the roso they usually walk on a path of thorns tver after. r