4 utl TOPICS OF THE TIMES, j A CHOICE SELECTION OF INTER- ESTINQ ITEMS. j CasnsBeatt ud CrKiefasna Dawl I pon the , UautmtAs of the Dmj- Historical ud Mew Kotea. j A dat at a time is the way to live j a happy life. If Mr. Stead and Mrs. Gougar seri ously desire to alleviate distress in J Chicago they will go away. ChicagD i Times. J No woman- is going to raw wood and say nothing. If she has to saw the wood the world will certainly ! bear from ber. I Speaking of Anarchists and the j doctrine of dynamite it will be j noticed that bums and bombs seem to go together. The regular army of Mexico go into a fight with the latest batch of revo lutionists at Custhuiriochi, presuma bly over the pronunciation. Now that Admiral Mello is out on the broad ocean he wants to be care ful that Mr. Vanderbilt's yacht, which is also out, doesn't run into him. It Is a fashion to say a girl is " as graceful as a willow," but don't you think the willow, with its drooping ways, looks a little round-shouldered? The greatest depth record d of Lake Michigan is eight, hundred and seventy feet. The mean depth is about three hundred and twenty-five feet. It is melancholy that when a man learns by experience not to jump from a moving cable car on the side nearest the other track the lesson comes too late to be ot pra tical serv ice to him to him. The Boston Traveller accuses some of its wicked local contemporaries of having stolen its news. The idea of stealing news from a Boston news paper! Nobody but another Boston editor would have dreamed of doing such a thing. 'The poet Uiley has a great ad miration for Kipling," says a news paper paragraph. Now, let's have a paragraph saying that Kipling has a great admiration for tht; poet Riley, and then that advertising scheme will have been fairly worked. A valuable discovery has been made in the southern part of Arkan sas. It Is aluminium ore in a new form. It is called "rootsite." At first it was regarded as a phosphate. It is found In great beds at a depth of twenty to thirty feet below the surface. Thieves blew open a safe in a Colorado saloon. When a policeman came after them they took him along with thee sh and the jewels as part of the booty and appurtenances of the gin mill. It's hard sledding when a uolic-man isn't safer than the safe in a saloon. Col. Wat Hahdin of Kentucky, was recently asked if he d d not re gard a certain fellow in Washington who had dealt most villainously with him as the mo t pluiierfect, unmiti gated scoundrel he ever knew. The Colonel studied the question with thoughtful gravity for a moment and finally decided: "No; I am co m mitted to a fellow out in Ohio." Among the sufferers from the hard times in Italy is General Menotti Garibaldi, son of the Italian hero. Although the General, like the other descendants of Gar.baldi, has a state pension of 10,000 lire, he lost so much money recently that he was obliged to allow his furniture to be sold last month to pay back taxes. The General is a member of Parlia ment Is Nevada recently the State militia had their annual target prac tice, when not a bullseye was made. On the hame day a citl.en of Indiana started out with an ancient revolver and killed four people. So pleased was be with hia marksmanship that, despairing of ever beating it, he turned his weapon on himself and is now no more able to hit a bullseye thau a Nevada militiaman. There was a heavier loss by Are in this country during 1893 than for many years preceding. There were few fires that deserved the name of conflagrations, but the total of de struction was very large, and the necessity of a better system of build ing was never more apparent foe big blazes In Boston, Toledo and De troit were an ill omen for the open ing of the new year; but it is to be hoped that the awful record of 183 is not to be repeated. A French physician who has found that the majority of deaths upon the Dfttkoeld arise from the bleeding to tola of the wounded while waiting for the surgeon, proposes that each soldier in the French army shall be Uoght where the arteries of the bod ar. and hew to arrest hemorrhages from them. In doing this be found a use for that most useless of arts, tattooing; a small fly u re of some kind being tattooed over each artery, so that the soldier can at on e see where to apply the ligature. Pokek chips ha'e their own sweet way of telling a story and they rarely drop out of the wrong croup. The teller of a savings bank at Salem, Mass., adjourned to Canada some weeks ago because of the usual rea sons and the City Marshal, in his in vestigations, found in a chest in the rooms of the departed financier 2,000 tri-coiored chips and a quantity of fine wines. There were some inci dentals also in a number of books is sued to depositors cf the bank, the books being mixel up with the chips. The revelation is quite interesting to the depositors, and their personal judgment on poker chips is doubtless emphatic and useful. The limit of profitable size in ocean vessels has been reached in the largest that have lately been built Such at least is the opinion of Charges H. Cramp, the Philadel phia ship builder. If vessels are made much deep r they cannot enter New York harbor. If longer, it will be hard to make them strong enough to be seaworthy. The strain of weight on a long vessel between two waves is enormous. Mr. Cramp says English steamers waste much room that the best ma le A merican designs save. His opinion is that this superi ority of American workmanship and skill will with a fair chance give us a considerable part of the future steam boat building trade. All that Is of value in our Institu tions depends on the supremacy of law and on the prompt and resolute support given by the people to law. The lesson should be learned not only by the class which Is liable to be tempted by anger or prejudice to give th rein to passion, but by that higher class which does the thinking for the community. Mobs take their cue from a few leading men. A speaker or a newspaper swavs them In times of excitement Outbursts of disorder can generally be traced to the Inflam matory counsel of some one to whom the popula e looks for guidance. In such cases it is the incendiary writer or speak r who is the author of the disorder, and not the ignorant fools who apply the torch. It is sad to think that there Is hardly ever a mob outbreak against law which does not find some newspaper to justify it Tnorc.H the dynamite bomb has snigally failed as a political engine it eems to be growing in popularity. That this cowardly form of murder Is finding more practitioners every year the columns of the newspapers amply demonstrate Yet the tur bulent and half-crazed fanatics who employ dynamite can point to no single instance in wbichits successful use has in the slightest degree ad vane d the cause for which they were working. The nihilists who assas sinated the father of the present car of Kussia only hastened the accession to the throne of a monarch more autocratic than he whom they slaughtered. Has the Ilaymarket bomb contributed to the wider ac ceptance of that curious political doctrine known as anarchy? Can the cause of the people be in anyway benefited by hurling explosives into the midst of a theater filled w th wo men and children as at Barcelona oi by mowing down the nation's repre sentatives. without regard to indi vidual or party, as at Paris? The Chicago police declare that the "relic hunters" who swarm Jack son Park since the gates were opened are more like thieves and burglar than anything else. They reoort the most disgraceful scenes daily enacted in the World's fair ground. The, tell us of men, women, and girls, well dressed and apparently respect able, jostling against tramps and street urchins for scraps and frag ments of the wrecked bui dings on Midway Plalsance; of dainty ladies carrying off doors, shutters, tables, window sash, rolls of matting and a J manner of rubbish in their carriages. They tell us that the utmost exertion is required to keep thes.j respectable vandals out of the main buildings, where valuable exhibits lie about uo packed. What a pretty tale this it to tell of the chivalry of Chicago, Yet we must believe the South Park policeman, because the stories quite surpass the imagination even of a uniformed guardian of the peace. One word to the police in Jackson Park; A "relic hunter" turned thlel should 1 e treated as a thief, not as I relic hunter. One example will suf fice. Kariy to Bed. Even in great cities careful people keep early hours. "We bad a line sunrise this morn ing," said one New Yorker to another. "Did you s e It?" "Sunrlser" said the second man, "why, I'm always in bed before sun rise. M New York Ledger. BAMBOOZLING GRANDMA. There never wae a grandma hall so goon t" riewnisuered while untitle ber chair tie stood. And laid his roy ebeek. With maimer w; m?k. against hot dear o.d fat a in loving, luood. There never was a nioer grandma bora ; I Jtiiuw eu-ne little boys uiui; be lorlorm, hfceau 1 be 're none like you. I wonder wbat 1 d do Without a grandma a kisses night and morn T' There waa never a dearer grandma, there T Ha klaei her, ami he sw.olbod her snow white hair. llte-n & ed her runted cap. And utNilltd in her lap. While era&lwa, miming, rucks I her old arm chair. "When I'm a man what things to Ton 111 bring; A burse and carnage and a watch ana ring, Ail grandmas are so nice (Just hare be kiwd her twloet, Atd grsndwss giTe a gcod boy every :hiug.lr Betot e bis dear old f- andma could rep This boy iuokad up, and with a roguish eye. Then whimpered in her ear That aobedy might hear ; "fay. grttxKimt, bate you any mora guinea pier" Nebraska btate Journal. OLD ROCKET. . " Tnat's what 1 call sinful waste, feeding oats to a horse that can't do a stroke of work. Just turn him out into the wood-lot, Luke, and mind you put up the bars." Poor old 1 locket ra sed bis head at the sound of his master's well-known voice, and a gleam of affection came into his dim, brown eyes. Iiut old Farmer Hanks did not even glance toward the gaunt white horse, and Luke led the way to the ionesouie wood-land which was henceforth to be the animal's home. He muttered, too, as be went, ''I hope when Igrow old 1 won't be so mean as to begrudge a creature a handful of oats after he's worked hiruself out for me." He stroked the horse's nose with rough pity as he replaced the bars and returned to his work in the stable-yard Day after day Pocket would come down to the fence and wait for some one to take him home his chin resting on the upper rail and his ecs turned longingly toward the stable. Mean while the days grew shorter, the scanty herbage scan ter, and the nights colder. It was the 24th of Decemlier, and bitjercold. An icv wind whistled through the leafless branches over head, and the ground was covered with a rough coat of Ice. Poor old Itocket hungry and shiv ering, leaning wearily against a iree trunk in the desolate wood, suddenly pricked up his e;irs and started for ward with a joyful whinny. He had beard the well-remembered, well loved voice of his master, and pres ently he saw his master's wagon on th narrow road before him. ' ome on," said Mr. Hanks, im patiently, "don't be all night:" How was Ko-ket to know that he was addressing the frisky young crea ture lietween the shafts? He th iught the command was for him. So he hobbled forward at his very best speed. Who can tell what thoughts and anticipations wandered through old docket's dim brain a-, he ambied alter the vehicle! Perhaps he thought his punishment for growing old had come to an end, and now once more he would enjoy the com forts of a good stable and plenty of foo;L Mr. Hanks had cut down a young ce dar to be used as a Christmas tree for hs grandchildren. The bars leading into the road had been let down, and the old n an drove through without stopping to put them in their place. So Kocket followed along the road, and across the railway track, without be in detected, for time had dimmed his master's hearing. It was dark when thev reacned the v.llage store, atid Kocket stood patiently behind the wagon, n ar some other horses, whiie Mr. Hunks made his purchas s and chatted with his cronies within. Surely Locket must have thought the old times returned, as he waited and listened: The wind grew colder each mo ment The young horse 1 efore the wagon kicked, and stamped, and shook his head with impatience, so that when Mr. Hanks returned, with his arms full of ackages, he could scarcely restrain the animal long enough to climb to bis seat Still without observing Kocket, he seized the reins. ( JIT started the new horse at a great rate. The Christ mas tree bouoded about In the back or the wagon as though it would leap out each moment Kocket trotted along behind. In vain Farmer Hanks tugged at the lines; the young ani mal had the bit lietween his teeth and was determined to go His own pace. Although l ocket put his best foot foremost they w re soon out of sight. Still he kept on the well-re-me m tiered road, following the trail of t he wagon wheels homeward. Presently there was a crash and a shout. The crash he did not bed. but the shout came from his old master. Kocket hobbled on as rapidly as his slid legs would let him. When he came upon a wheel lying by the roaoslde, he stopped for an instant to sniff at it Directly across the railway track lay the remainder of the wagon, the Christmas tree and packages. In their midst lay Mr. Hanks motionless and unconscious. The young hoie, with the sbaftsdangling noisily at his heels, was just disappear ng around the bend. old Kocket paused, and loo ed un easily at his master, then pushed him gently with his noc This was the very spot where, In I ygone days, he was in the habit of cracking bis whip and tightening the reins, so Kocket knew that bere his master must not lie For more than ten minutes the horse eyed his master wistfully, now and then nibbling at the fur cap cov ering his bead, but to no purpose. Presently a low, humming sound reached bis ears, liaising his bead, Backet saw approaching that great one-eyed monster which always brougbt terror to bis breast On it came, Its red eye gleaming savagely down on him and the man at bis feet 1 Itocket waited for the word to be given to' hasten on, but bis ma-ter's lips were dumb arid his eyes closed, and the iron creature drew nearer and nearer. It was so close now that the glare from its eye fell red on the froen ground Leiore him. Then suddenly the flying clouds parted and let out a brilliant gleam of moonlight which diciosed to view the great white form of Kocket his undipped mane and tail streaming in the wind like ragged flag. From the iron horse came a shriek of dismay, which the other answered by a neigh ot defiance. There was a noisy rattle of brake, one or two more screams, then the monster re treated and paused, while several men, earning lanterns, came hurrv ing along the rails. They took little notice of Kocket. but bui.ed themselves with remov ing the wagon, tree, and packages. They shouted to the old man, and rubbed bis wrists and temples with ice, until at last be raised his head and spoke. "1 couldn't stop the pesky creature after the linch-p:n dropped out" be grumbled stagger ing to his feet "Hello:" he ex claimed, as the great unwinking red eye caught his sight "that was a clo-e shave. How did you come to stop?" "It was your white horse that stopped us," replied the engineer. "He was standing over you. His mane looked like a flag of distress in the moonlight" 'Whiter" repeated Mr. Hanks. "I thought be was brown, but my head's con; used by the thump I gave it Well, brown or white," he added, "if you will help me on his hack I'll get home some how. I'll send bacit for the wagon and tilings." "See here, Farmer." said one of the men earnestly, as he assisted Mr. Hanks to mount Kocket "your horse is nothing but a wrack of bones. Now remember he's saved your life to-nU'ht 8nd if you don't give him a good feed fur once, you deserve to be killed next time." "Old? a wrack of bones?" growled Mr. Hanks. "He's just turning foui years, and as iat as butter." "You're dreaming," replied the other, "lie don't look as if he would live to take you home." LZ."l suppose 1 ought to laugh at your jokes" snapped Mr. Hanks; "but I'm too sore, Glveruethe reins and let me go. I can't see well vet My head's so dizzy." "This is queer," said the man. "He's got no kind of a harness on, nothing but a bit of old rope about his neck. I can't make It out" "Neither can L" growled Mr. Hanks, "and as I am not up to try ing I'll just thanii you to give me the rope." So they put the rope Into the old man's half benutuiiea hand, arid Kocket, feeling the well remembered touch, turned bis face homeward and moved slowly on with his burden. It was not a long distance, but it was quite as much as the starving creature could ace iiuplish. As th came In sight of the house a great hub-bub arose, and out of the gate came (locking every man, woman, and ehild belonging to .Mr. Hanks' family, down to his wee, toddling great grandchild, all crying as thev sur rounded the old white horse, "Grand papa is safe! He Is not hurt after all." "And it Is old Kocket that was turned out to die brought you home!" exclaimed Luke, the stable boy, in am r.ement as he helped the old man from his uncomfortable seat 'The other horse cau;e ba-;k half an hour ago with the broken shafts bch nd him." Mr. Bank stood looking from Kocket to all the loving faces about him, st 11 entirely unable to compre hend how this thing had hapjiened. Presently he tiegan rubbing the shiv ering creature's cold long nose. Then turning to Luke, he said: "I rather think I've been ahrartiess, wicked old master to this poor licast He served me well, in his time, and I rewarded him by turning hlui out to die In bis old age. And see, he has saved my life somehow! Take him to the warmest corner of the stable, Luke, and from this on, care for him the best you know how, and let him have all he can eat " "I will," replied Luke, earnestly. And he kept his word. American Agriculturist M iniMterinic to the Mintl. A century ago a shrewd German recommended to every man overcome with sorrow to force himself each day to study for a fixed period a language or art whatever was most agreeable to him. The work for the brain on a totally different side from its grief is stimulating, strengthen ing. A political exile, also a Ger man, being sentenced to a long soli tary imprisonment, kept madness at bay by decorating the walls of his cell and by making lists and sketches of people and places he had known. He recommends a man in grief to pay instant attention to the little pur suits or occupations which usually give him pleasure, arid to obstinately devote himself to them until his brain has had time to heal. "If we are denied great joys let us earn estly seek to fill their pla e by unal! ones," be advises. People of method ical habits should be given occupation which will call forth their genius for organization and system. In short we should remember that th; brain Is a material organ as well as the stomach, and, when In danger of dis ease from the excessive strain upon it of one emotion, a counter irrita tion from other smaller ones Is a wholeso i e and usually success ul treat nent A man must have certain things I In bis pockets, or be does not feel comfortable wben be puts hie bands ! Inside. OLD-TIME HOME-MADE PANTS. rabrlnaUxJ In Forty Maura aVnor the Shead ing of tike Hhaap. "Late in the afternoon of one of the last days of May in the year 'TH, when 1 Mrs. Eunice Locke Kicbards was a few ruontns short of 13 vears old. notice came to Townsend, Mass., where my father used U live, that fifteen soldiers were wanted. "The training band was instantly called out and mi brother that was next older than I was one that was selected. He did not return till late at night when we were all in bed. When I rose in the morning I found my mother in tears, who informed me that my. brother John was to march next day after to-morrow at sunrise. My father was in Iioston in the Mas sachusetts assembly. "Mother saia that though John was supplied with summer clothes be must suffer for winter garments. There were at this time no stares and no articles to Ikj had, sxeept such as each family could make itself. The sight of mother's tears always brought all the hidden strength of body and mind Into action. I instantly asked what garment was needed. She replied. 'Pantaloons.' HJh, if that is all,' said I, 'we will weave and spin him a pair before he goes.' 'Hut' said mother, 'the wool Is on the sheep's back and the sheep are In the pasture. "I immediately turned to a younger brother and bade him take the salt dish and call them to the yard. "Mother replied: 'Poorchild, there are no sheep shears within three miles and a halt.' ' 'I have some small shears at the loom,' said I. " 'Hut you can't spin and weave it in so short a time.' " 'I am certain we can, mother. " 'How can you weave It? There is a long web Of linen in the loom.' "Hy this time the sound of the sheep made me quicken my steps to ward the yard. I requested my sister to bring the wheel and cards while I went for the wool I went to the yard with my brother and secured a white sheep, from which I sheared with niy loom shears half enough for a web. We then let her go with the rest of her fleece. I sent Hie wool In with my little sister, and Luther ran for a black sheep and held her while 1 cut wool off for my tilling and half the warji, ar.d then we allowed her to go with the remaining coafse part of the fleece. "The rest of the narrative the writer would abridge by saying that the wool thus obtained was duly carded, spun, washed, sized, and driea. A loom was found afewdors off. the web 'got in' and was woven, the cloth prepared, cut and made two or three hours before the brother's departure, that Is to s;;y, In forty hours from the commencement with out help from any modern improve ment" Greenfield (Mass.) Gazette. Ittinn Making. Thomas Carlyle once said that scarcely any book is so poor t hat some thing cannot I e learned from It With equal truth It may lie said that no industry is too humble to be interest ing. There Is nothing, for example, more prosaic than a rope, or that en ters into a ereater number of homely occupations, and yet In the march oi lalior-savln Invention, a rope-making machine is one of the last cn the list. So long, Indeed, did rope-making re main one of the manual arts that the name of the place where the work was done has become ingrained in popular speech; and the rot factory, though In no way meriting the ap pellation, is still called the "rope walk " Formerly it was considered a fact worthy of note that the government rope-walk at Iioston could turn out a row 1,00 feet long. A young workman In the rope-walk saw that the twist should lx; applied to the roK5 Instead of the strands, If machinery was to take the place of the band In roiie-maklng; and he real ized fame and fortune from the con ception. His opportunity came with the proposition to grapple for the broken ends of the Atlantic sub marine cable in the sixties. A rope fully twelve thousand feet long was required for the grappling, but the task of making one of this unheard of length could not be un dertaken seriously by any rope maker then In the business. At this juncture the young man, John Good by name, came forward with the pio'iosition to build machin ery from his own designs, and make a rope In one piece as long as was wanted. The offer seemed a bold one, but It was accepted, the machinery built, the rope mad?, the break In the cable four.d and repaired, and telegraphic communication established between the Old World and the New. A llarkwartl lover's I'roposaL, Tie was in love with the girl and she was not unwilling, but she had given no sign. Hs was so diffident that really she had had no opportunity. One evening they sat alone in a lit tle tiower of roses. "I dreamed of you last night" ho said, tentstively. "How nice," she responded, in that exasperating way which Is so inex presslve. "Yes?" he faltered, questionfngiy. "Tell me what you dreamed," she prettily commanded. "I thought we were sitting to gether on the banks of a beautiful stream," he said, low and murmur ously, "as the sun was sinking away to rest In the purpling stars, and we talked of birds, of music, of flowers, and of love. Your face glowed as if a great light shown In It but when 1 spoke of love you grew cold and dis tant and I could feel the chill air touching my bcart and see the buds of hope wither in the frost of your rllunnrnTaL T knew then how Ims larna all I coil Id do: boW fntil was effort but urged on by that mys terious power no man can eiptatn and none resists, I cast the fatsJdle and asked you to be mine." He stopped a moment trembllnc "And what did I say?" she asked. "No," and bis voice grew husky and his lips quivered. She put out her hand to htm softly. Dreams go by contraries, dear," she murmured. Detroit Free Iresa. The tease at SaaeU I Daaja. IVe sense of smell is by no means so developed In man as in dogs, cat, and other animals, but It is often ab normally keen In Indlvldualsdeprlved of other senses blind, deaf mutes, for example, can re&gnlze their friends and form an opinion about strangers solely by means of this sene. Possibly however, animals are only fcptmitive to certain smells, while un conscious of others that affect us If this be the case they would naturally lie able to follow up one particular scent more easily than a man, this scent to which they are sensitive be ing to them less confused with others. Dogs are able to track tbelr mas ters through crowded streets, where recognition by siifht is quite Impos sible, and can find a bidden biscuit even when its faint smell Is still fur ther disguised by eau de cologne. In some experiments Mr. Komanes lately made with a dog he found that It could easily track him when he was far out of sight, though no fewer than eleven people had followed him, step ping exactly in his footprints in order to confuse the scent The dog seemed to tract him chiefly bv the smell of his lioots, for when without them, of with new txiots on, It failed; but followed, though slowly and hesitatingly, when his master was without either boots or stock ings. Dogs and cats certainly get more Information by means of this sense than a man can; they often get greatly excited over certain smells, and remember them for very long tieriods. The Origin or Cyclones. There has been of late a tendency tc ward a change of view In regard to the origin of those widespread storms known as cyclones. M. Faye, the I rrencn astronomer, lias lung amuvi that they originate in the uper regions of the atmosphere instead of at the surface of the earth. Kecently Mr. W. L. Dallas has an nounced, as the result of his studies ' of the cyclones of the Indian Ocean, j that the probability seems to him to ; I that those whirling storms "de scend from and retreat to the superior j layers of the atmosphere." Much more study will tie required, however, to settle the question, but is surely most interesting to think that storms should come to us In the way suggested. The atmosphere is a sort of ocean, at whose bottom jji dwell, and If M. Faye's view Is cor rect the storms that whirl over us must first lash the air far above our heads, just as a whirl started In water may bore Its way down toward the bottom and disturb the littes fishes there. llcautilul Snowstorm In a IlallrtMin. A strange thing happened at a dance given by a member of the Kussian nobility long ago. Thenight was bitter cold, but the cold bleak winds did not reach the interior of the ballroom. Here there were warmth and comfort and the gay dancers became overheated and they perspired freely the air of the room having lieen dry and like a sponge, quickly ab-orbed the moisture from their 'KTsons. A Kussian count be ing uncomfortably warm, opened a window, which admitted a currant of cold air, and the effect was novel and instantaneous. Immediately a part of the moisture was turned into little crystals, shining silver white, ttiat floated in the air, and, to the astonishment of all, there was a niln iat ure snowstorm In the midst of the gay throng. Argonaut SlriKtilHr Fact About Gine. It Is a rather singular Tact that the most precious gems are composed of the most common substanees. The diamond is the purest form of carbon, and Is Identical in composi tion with ordinary charcoal without the impurities of the latter. The ruoy, on the other hand, is nearly pure alumina, a substance found in profusion In every clay bank. The scientific name for crystallized . alumina is corundum, and .tr- item! comprehended under this designation are sometimes more valuable than diamonds of the same weight The ruby, sapphire, oriental emerald, topaz, amethyst, aqua marine, chry. solltc, hyacinth, and other precious stones are all alumina, the varieties of color being caused by Inappreciable quantities of metallic oxides. A CniMiltloriAl faction. "Mr. Dusenlicrrv," said the sick man to his neighbor, whom be bad called to the side of what he sup posed was his death-ted, "we have had much difficulty in the past and have not been on speaking terms I believe I am now about to die and I have sent for you that we may settle our differences and lie friends before Igo." "Nothing would give me greater pleasure than a reconciliation," re plied Dusen berry, as he took tlio band of tho dying man. "Hut remember," said the invalid In a gradually sinking voice, "If I get well the thing goes on Just as It did before," Brooklyn Life. Never lie In bed thinking that tho cat that Is mewing at the door to come In, will get ditcounwd and quit Nuisances never become die- jcouraged.