,' v ? -vf . " ' 1 V 4 0 V L - .AmummMtHtttttft' l oe Bondman. ... Dy HALL CAINC Coelkinni Stery. stant he bad doubled bis arms across his face and dashed through glean and oars. A minute afterwards the room was full of rain and women, and Jason wag CHAPTER VII.. (Continued.) What happened thereafter lie never rightly knew, only that la a dia pered dream he was Handing with oth ers outride the rail about Qovern meat Houae while the- snow began to tall through the darkness, that he saw the dancers circling across the lighted windows and beard the music of the flutes and violins above the steady htm nf tha ms. that he knew this brought back Into It pale, sprinkled with snow and blood-stained. "I charge that maa with threatening the life of my husband." Greeba cried. Then It seemed as If twenty strong hands laid hold of Jason at once. But no force was needed, for be stood quiet merry-making to be a festival of her . d gllent ana looked like a man who had walked in bis sleep, and been sud denly awakened by the sound of Gree ba's voice. One g;ance he gave her of great suffering and proud defiance, and then, guarded on either hand, passed out of the place like a captured Hon. marriage whom he loved with a love beyond that of bis immortal soul, that the shame of his condition pain i and the pain of It maddened him, the madness of it swept away his con sciousness, and that when he came to himself he had forced his way Into the house, thinking to meet bis enemy face in fan and was in a room alone with Oreeha, who was cowering before him with a white face of dismay. 1 "Jason," she was taylng, "why are you here?" , M "Why are you here?" he asked. "Why have you followed me?" she cried. . "Why have you followed him?" "What have you come for?" "la this what you have come for?" "Jason," she cried again, "1 wronged you( that Is true, but yon forgave me. I asked you to choose for me, and if you had said 'stay.' I should have stayed. But you released me, you know you did. You gave me up to him, and now he is my husband.", "But this tuaui ! Michael Sunlocks,' said Jason. "Didn't you know that before?" said Greeba. Ah. then, I know what you hare come for. You have recalled your forgiveness, and have come to minuti nt for descrtlna you. But spare me! Oh, spare me! Not for my own sake, but his; for I am his wife now and he loves me very dearly. No, no, not that, but only spare me, Ja son," she cried, and crouched at his feet. I would not harm a hair of your bead, Greeba," he said. f "Then what have you come for? she said. "This man la a son of Stephen Or ry." he said. "Then it i for him," she cried, and ImiuH tn her feet. ' "Ah. now I understand. I have not forgotten the night In Poit-y-Vullln." "Does be know of that?" said Jason. . "No." ... "Does he know I am here?' "No." - "Does he know we have met?" "No." "Let me see him!" "But why?" she stammered. "Why see him? It Is I who have wronged yon. "That's why I want to see him, Jason. . She uttered a cry of terror and stag gered back. There was an ominous sl . lenre.- tn which it passed through Greebe's mind that all that was hap-mminc- then had happened before. She could bear Jason's labored breathing and the dull thud of the music through the walls. "Jason." ahe cried, "What harm has he ever done you? 1 alone urn guilty before you. If your vengeance must fall on anyone let it fittl on me." "Where Is he?' iatd Jason. "He Is gone," said Greeba. "Gone?" "Yes, to And my poor father. The dear old man was wrecked In coming here, and my husband sent men to And him, but they blundered and came back empty-handed, and not a half an hour ago he went off himself." w h rldlns?" said Jason; but .uhn.it waitiriv for an answer he mAn tMMrrfi thn rinor. "Walt! Where are you going?" aui llEhtnlna- the thought had fluahMi tbxouEh her mind, "What If he uhould follow him!" Now the door to the room was a heavy, double-hung door of antique i,..im aiM at the next. Instant she had leaped to It and shot the bcavy wooden barr that bolted It. At that he laid ono powerful hand on the bar Itself, and wrenched It out ward acre the leverage of Its Iron mi it crsrked and broke, and fell to the ground In splinters . Then the strong excitement lent the brave girl strength and her fear for ' her husband gave her courage, and crying, "Stop, for heaven's ike stop, she put her back to the door, tore up the aleeve of her dress, and thrust her bare right arm through the loops where the bar had been. . , . "Now," she1 cried, "you must break my arm after It" God forbid," said Jasoa. and he fell back for a momeat at that sight. But, recovering hlmeelf. he said, "Greeba, I would not touch your beautiful arm hurt i; no. not for all tne wealth ,.f tha world But 1 must go, so let said me pass. ' Still her terror was .centered on tne thought of Jason's vengeance. "Jason," she cried, "he Is my hus band. Only think my husbaad. ' "Let me pass," said Jason. "Jason," she cried again, my hus band Is everything to me, and I am all IB all to hisv" "Let me pass." said Jason. "Tow Inteud to follow h!m. You are seeking Mm to kill him." "Let me pass." , "Dray It" "I-a ma naaa." "Never," ahe cried. "Kill me If you will, but until you have done so you .k.iV4 Mai tela door. Kill UWt "Mot for nv soul's salvation!" said ' Jeaoa. "Then give up your wicked purpose ni It un atva It UD." Only when ho shall have given up hi. Htm- . ' rhan I warn you. I will show you uo rttr (or you have shown none to At that she stiismsrt for help, and ' siamtlr the falat music ceased, and " Y . Tca fMft, All 14 CHAPTER IX. THE PEACE OATH. There was short shrift for Red Ja son He was tried, by the court near est the spot, and that was the criminal court over which the Bishop la his civil capacity presided, with nine of his neighbors on the bench beside him. From this court an appeal was pos sible to the Court of the Quarter, and again from the Quarter Court to the High Court of Althing; but appeal In this case there was none, for there was no denfence. And because Icelandic law did not allow of the imprisonment of a criminal until after he had been sentenced, an Inquest was called forth with w. Jaaon should escape or coro- i naaa the crime he had attempted. 80 iha Pnuri nf Inauirv sat the same night in the wooden shed that served both for 8euate and House 01 jubucb. The snow was now falling neavuy unH th hoiir was late, but the court' hniiMt was thronged. It was a little niPA n nlaln box. bare, featureless. and chill, with wans, root ana nem i wnnrt and floor ot hard eartn. rour short benches were raised, step above step, against the farthest side, and thn hiahoat of thpun the Bishop sat, with three of his colleagues on eco of the three rows beneath him. The prisoner stood on a broad stool to tne right, and the witnesses on a like afoot tn the left. A wooden bar crossed the room about midway, and In the nnen anace between that and the door the spectators were crowded together. Th nlace was lighted by candles, and some were fixed to the" walls, othefs were held by ushers on the end of long sticks, and a few were hung to the roof rafters by hemp ropes tieo aooui their middle. The floor ran like a stream, and the atmosphere was full of the vapor of the snow tnax wa melting on the people's clothes. Noth ing could be ruder than the court house, but the Court that sat there ob served a rule of procedure that was al most an idolatry of formv ' The prisoner was called by the name of Jason, son of Stephen Orry, and hovl ,w ananered In a voice 80 hollow that It eaemed to come out of the prth beneath him. he rose to his place His attitude was du:i and Impassive, and he seemed hardly to see the rest less crowd that murmured at signt or him. His tall flgure stooped, there wai a cloud on his strong brow, and a slow nre in his bloodshot eyes, and his rca hair, long as a woman's, hung in dis ordered masses down his worn checks to his shoulders. The Bishop, a vener able prelate of great age, looked at him and thought. "That man s heart Is dead within him." The spokesman or the court wa3 a miniHe-aied man. who was short, naa llttlo piercing eyes, a square nrusn 01 iron-gray half, that stood erect across the top of his corded forehead, and a crlsn. clear utterance, like the crackle of a horse's hoofs on the frost, Jasoa was charged wUh n attempt to take the life of Michael Sunlocks, nr President of the second Republic. h dirt not nlead and bad no defence, and the witnesses against him spoke only in -awwei to the leading ques- tinnn nf thn ludceS. The ilrst of the witnesses was Greeba w.plf and her evidence, given in Knrllah. waa required to be Inter nratnd. All her brave strength was now aonn. She trembled visibly. Her eyes were down, her head was, bent, her face was half-hidden by the hood of a cloak ihe wore, ana ner tones were merely audible. She bad little to say. The prisoner naa iorcea ni way Into Government House, and there, to her own face, had threatened to taae the life of her husband. In plain words ho had done so, and then made show of going In pursuit of her hus band that he might carry out his de- 1n- . .. w ' ' "Wait," said the -Bishop, your bus band was not preseat?", "No," said Greeba. "There was, therefore, no direct vio lence?" K "None." "And the whole sum of the prison r'a nttanae. so far as you know of It. lies In the use or tne woras mat you have repeated? Ya" Then, turning to the spokesman of the Court, the old Bishop eald "There has been no oven act. i nis l not an attempt, but a threat to take life. And this is not a crime oy me law of this, or any other Christian rotintrv. . "Your pardon, my iora, saw me littt. man. In his crisp tones. "I will show that the prisoner la guilty of the essential part of muraer itseir. Mur der, my lord," he added, "la not merely the destruction of a life, for there Is homicide, by misadven ture, there Is Jus.lnsbhs homicide, and th.ra are the rlKnls, long recogniseu by Icelandic " 01 ln" avengers 01 blood. Murder Is ti kill in secrecy and aftar loas-hsrbored malice, and acw nr lord. I snail ibow mat ine prisoner has lata tn wait to slay the president of the Republic" At that Orteba stood down, and hmhm followed her. Nearly evsryoae had been sosanoaed with hAsa Jaaon had exehaaged words eigat. oara- noior. tering doorkeeper at the aenate-hoaaf, and one of the masons at the fort. Much waa made of the fainting ln the Cathedral yard, on the Sunday morn ing, an4 out of the deaf landlady, the Cathedral caretaker, some startling disclosures seemed to be drawn. "StHl," said the old Bishop, "I see no overt act." "Good gracious, my lord," said the little spokesman, "are we to wait un til the knife haH been reddened?" , "God forbid!" said the old Bishop, Then came two witnesses to prove motive. The llrst of them was the tipfy comrade of former days, who had drawn Jshou into the drinking shop. He could say of his own knowl tx that Jaon was iealous of the new Governor. The two were brothers In a sort of way. So people said, and so Jason had told him. They aad the same father, but different mothers. Ja son's mother had been the daughter of the old Governor, who turned his back on her at her marriage. At her death he relented, and tried to find Jaaon, hut iuld not. and then took up With Michael. Sunlocks. People said thai was the beginning of the new Presi dent's fortuae. At all events Jason thought he had bsen uupplanted, was very wroth, and swore he would ue revenged. The second c,t the two witnesses pointed to a very different motive. He waa one of the three Danes who had twice spoken to Jasoa the elderly man with the meek and quiet manner. Thnueh himself loyal to the Icelandic Republic he had ben mncn mrown among lt enemies. Jason was one of them; he came here as a spy direct fmm ConenhaKen. and his constant ..n,.ataa ware ThorJlKpn. an Old. whitn-honlpfl man living tn toe Hign Btropt. anil Polvesen. a young and sal low man, who kept one of the stores farina, tha With theHC tWO JBSOD had been heard by him to plan the assassination of the Prca'dcnt. (To bo Continued.) Tie United Skuas Department of Agrteultare bar undertakes a good work la the secuong for experimental earposes the grasses that grow wild ln thla country. F. Lamson-Scribner, ag iaatologist of .the Depart aiat pf Agri culture, summarizes thus the work that has been already done along this line. According to the provisions of the act of congress, making appropriations for the Department of Agriculture for the neeal year 190!. thin division was di rected to purebae and collect seeas and specimens of valuable economic grasses and forage plants, to be distrib uted to the various experiment station under the direction of the Secretary Df Agriculture, to ascertain their adapt ability to the various soils and climates of the United States. In order to can- out this direction, plans were made early ln the season to undertake the work with the beginning of the nscai year. Mr. C. L. Shear, an aasiatant in the division, was put in charge of the seed and field work, and immediately after July 1 he began work la the Held, and several agents were employed to work with him during the collecting He was verbally instructed to make the collection of seeds ot valu STEEL WOOL IN ARTS. , MVST icixra-a gkikvaxce. From the Kansas City Star: The ran sank low, across the level of tho swamp, as I saw Aunt Ellen turn In at the gate and trudge up the avenue, Aa she shuffled a curtsy and dropped gown on the topmost step, I response to my invitation, I perceived that something out of the ordinary had haniaheil the usually expansive grin from the broad yellow face under the gray-hued turban. It was gravity It self. I waited, "It's pow'ful hot, Miss Jennie. Seems lak dah hain't a bref ob air a-stirrin'. Honey, how's yo' paw's rheumatlx?" "Not any better. Aunt Ellen. Now that the doctors have failed you had hotter nrescribe. Jane tells me that you have charms that will cure any thine." :--.. "Deed chile, I hain't set up foh no doctah; but de good Lawd. he know dah hain't nuttln' lak de lie on a poie- able native grasses and forage plants cat foh dat flainjn' rheumatlz, what yo' the leading feature of his new wora. t There are many native grasses and fnaaa nlants of itreat economic value that have never yot been Introduced into cultivation. This is especially true tha rraaaea of the srreat cattle ranges of the West, which formerly grew iu aiich abundance and which tnreugn Polecat," I gasped. "Ya-asm. Jes cotcn mm, en xoaa hlra wif da ba-ar on. When de fat 'tins ter drip, fotch out some raid nan- nel, en grease It wit de drippin's; en it will cure him up in no time." This staggering prescription being Takaa riaea r Manrfpapar la AU CaMaa ' Wo.-" "Although steel wool has only been used as a substitute for sandpaper dur lnz the last six years, it is now very extensively used for polishing purpos es by metal workers, carpenters, eabl net makers, bouse painters, sign paint ers and gralners throughout the United States," aald a wholesale dealer ln the material to the writer recently. "Steel wool is an article of regular manufac ture and It Is put up ln one-pound pack ages very much resembling rolls or cotton batting. It is composed of sharp-edged threads of steel, which curl up like wool or the familiar wood fiber known as excelsior, but it is mucn finer ln texture than the latter mate rial, the finest quality being not much coarser than the coarsest of natural wools. The superiority of steel wool over the ordinary sandpaper consists In Its great pliability, which enables a worker to polish or smooth down ir regular parts of moldings or ornamen tal woodwork.' Such work can be done with steel wool far better and much more expeditiously than with sand paper. The latter clogs In use, but steel wool always retains a more per fect polishing edge or surface. The wool la made in varlou degrees of cosrseness, tne coarser graae best adapted for taking off old paint or varnish and for smoothing and clean-1 ing floors like those of bowling alleys. The wool is generally used with gloves to keep the sharp ends from sticking into the" workman s fingers. van- ington Star." over-stocking and mismanagement hav yoni my power to fill I temporized. now become almost extinct, in m "Aunt Ellen, you know all about it; propagation and cultivation of these Buppoge you coftX the colonel Into let- snecies. native to tne sou anu tw you try It? wiimatait ilea the hope of the ranch- . MI jannv. honer. Gawd knows I man and the herder for restoring to hain-t ntten ter Oo nuttin'. I'se both their former carrying eapaclty now rsd Joog ob dat trifln', no-count nig- denleted ranges and pastures, rarweu- ,, wnat caU hggef 'Mlstah Jones.' lar effort has been directed to securing COIne up ter gee ef yo- cod'n he'p me in nuantlty seeds of these wild range outen lt trasses; also those of probable value "Certainly, Aunt Ellen, what can I In the South for winter paaturage, d0 for youT tiiu uwaiv to Drove good meadow "miu Jennie, mek me some ob dem grasses tor high altitudes and those cream piea en a cake, en lemme hab a especially adapted to dido ins cnp'l ob dem ole hens." aanrfs. for which there is so much ae- "ig that all? Of course. When do mand. Seeds of a few native grasses you want then,r. of highly economic importance nave ..D,g heah's Friday; en Sunday am been obtained by purchase from parties d 'Pnted day. Gawd he'p dat fool living in the remote regions I nlggah. thev arow. A number of -arieties were "Aunt Ellen, I want to know what obtained in thla way from the vlciaity ma meang. Is ft a wedding?" of (Mlver Ctty.Nejr MeaieA- in WW Tawd. no. Miu Jennie. Yo' knows COTtOX-T flTAKD THK BTOStT. From the Detroit Free Press: When he returned from a trip to nis oiu home In the east it would have ben a disinterested guess that be had been (n a rallroa.1 wreck or the fighting por tion of the army. He took every one of the front steps with his right foot first, the other following. He gritted his teeth, made faces and groaned when he happened to slip. "My gracious, John!" from bla anx ious wife. , "Drop thaf MaUssy. I haven't got neuralgia, rheumatism . or lumbago, . grip or sciatica. Don't make a scene and don't go telephoning for the doc tor. Ouch!" as he dropped heavily Into an easy chair. "Now, now," when she attempted to approach him. "You just sit down and listen and bare some sense. . . . " "I've got what baseball men call 'cholly boss.' Veterinary surgeon? Thunder and lightning, MaUssy, diant I ask you politely to keep still? When I got down there I thought I was a kid again and I wanted' to tear around the old farm Just like I used to. There's no fool like an old fool. The boys were going rabbit hunting. J went right with them and wasted my breath tell-. Ing how I used to slay the bunnies. At the end of the first mile I was wheel ing like a tug in distress. But I wasn't going to hoist any signals, and laid It all to defective bronchial tubes. A mile farther I was plowing heavily and gasping. "I struck off flnto the wood myself, y telling the boys I knew an old rabbit ' hole and for them to keep their eyea peeled. I went to sleep In a snow bank.and was roused by something run" ning by, got to my feet and fired both barrels. The first killed the dog and the second peppered the calf of Jim mle's leg. I hired a farmer to take us home In a one-horse wagon and just as soon as I was able to-uaove about a lit tle I insisted that aeaaalng business re quired me in Detroit Where's that ar nica liniment?" . , work It not Infrequently happened that i - taritntia lourneTs naa UJ v made to regions Inaccessible to etock before grasses In seed coma tha collection was made by hand. snm. four tons of seed of about ono hundred and thirty varieties of grasses t..m nlants were thus gathered, v. .....tittaa tn each case varying i . tn are hundred pounds. Never before has so Urge an amount of native seeds been collected b.y th department " tudaatrtol DavalopaMat Itrlngs KvOS, The annual day of humiliation and prayer was recently observed ln Prus sia, according to long estaoiisnea cus tom, and a great many of the Berlin newspapers took occasion to print ar ticles upon the recent deterioration in public morality. They asserted that the rapid Industrial development ot the country and Its corresponding Im provement ln Its .financial condition had Bostirted 'In an alarmitig growth of social evils and abuses. . I'ae ben marh'ud this long time. "Sunday excursion?" I hasarded. "'Scursion? Huh! Hawses en chains cud'n' hoi dls nlggah.. Wa-t yo talkln' 'bout, Miss Jennie?" "Well, is it a basket meeting? "No-am. . Dey hain't no trubble ter me. l'aa a wulck-er in ae vinva-au, eu dey pintedly 'Joices my soul." ."Then what under the shining hear ts is going to happen?" I began to grow excited as Aunt Bl' len grew more aad more mysterious. She shifted ground uneasily. Miss iiaw ia rk appu I Jennie. Gawd knows I been a , goou n is eery essential that applet should 'oman ter dat upatartin' sarplnt ob a w. ri, nranared for market ta I raller .nlggah what .call niaaer mr i.-( X.. , v K. I '.j.. t.. 't a. !.. orilar that the DeSt rSSUlia ' I mau, en neau ua win wucw a. oruer . .vi- A in vlaw I .. a ... t At. nnnaturat. wav. talned, and it is wim m - i a that the following uggeaUona are sub- Dat nlggah's fust wife, Liar Jane, ben J!t.d. dald mo'n five years, en heah he Jes a k.i aiiinners and packers of ap- orderln' de preachln of de funl. i .h,M mak It a point to pack Ya-asm. At de Temple of Solomon, their fruit honestly; that la. have the nM' Sunday, t'm tellin' de Gawd's fruit run alike all tnrougn u "' i trui; en' mo n aai, ne gwiuo u Do not endeavor to cause deception by cook de dlnnah. No-am, tain't no wed .i.Mna rood, sound, large fruit on the I a nor Sunday 'scursion, en taint no . A .a Karval and fill I M.Atn. It'a mv hiiahanfVa flint ton and Duiwiu m. , i immcl uiccuu , . ,j ."j in the middle with a lot of gnarly, wlf,.B wormy and decayea irun. nay. The deception is easily detected just liu Htjauxa. Maklas Haak-Xota Fapar. The paper upon which bank-notes and bonds are printed Is all made at Dalton, Mass., and its manufacture Is one of the greatest secrets connected 1th the government system of money making. Each sheet Is as careiaiu watched from the time It first assumes shape until deposited ln the vaults ol the treasury department at wasmuK- ton. aa though It were gold.-Uolden Hours. v , BaUroad Tea. eibethr., CanuaircaoKaliats have planned the Mtnatnictinn of a railroad through the Samoyede peninsula with tho objret or bringing the wheat of western BiDen .,1,-klv anil arnnnmicallv Into th! world market. The wheat will be ship ped by tho Ob and Its navigable tribti tarlea to Obdorsk; then, by rail to the seacoast and thonco by vessel to ten don or other porta. upon Investigation, and merchants do ... tn have fraud practiced upon them, neither do they care to practice It upon their .customers Full reguiauou-iMseu be used. Take the barrel, one neaa out, nail the hoops, and brejak .prna euds of lne nhtM'at"tne Inside; place a tayer or tier of apples, good ana uni form iles, smooth, bright, healthy, as aa nosalDie. Siem ouwuwaiu, on the lower end, then fill up, a basket full at a time, tnrowing n an. anariv and windfall apples. and shaking the barrel well after each deposit until It IS mil two lncnes auu.. tharim: nlace the head squarely on the apples, and with a screw or lever force it Into place and nail se- Tnrn over the barrel and mark name of apple with red or black lead, or stenell. Bear ln mind that, lo be ahlpped safely, fruit must be packed tight, to prevent rattling or bruising. ...... In shipping apples the first of the aaajon early varletlea shippers ahnuid see that openings are cut on the side of the barrels and also ln both ends, to admit of free circulation oi .ir which will greatly help to bring apples through In good condition dur ing warm w earner. . THK MANIA VOK CHANGING I'lUXa 'I guess my wife has got the fever tor changing things worse than any woman in town. I'll bet she s already changed half her -Christmas presents. "Sort ot a mania, eh 7 . "That's Just It Why, only this morn ing I gave her a $5 bill and she said she guessed she'd go right down to the store and chango it." Cleveland Plain Dealer. "You are hoarse, Mr. Croaker." ; ' "Yeif. I caught cold last night oat in the rain and woke up this morning with a man la say throat" ' - ..nr. roaMona rats. , Tears clung to the" long lashea of Egypt's queen, to say nothing of the headless slave who weltered in his blood at the foot of her gorgeous di van. : . :; : ' It was plain , that the daughter of the Pharaohs had received evil tidings-: i In the streets the newsboys could be heard hawking the Evening Monolith. "All about the football game! Cor inth 1-attln school, 10! Alexandria Poly technic, 8!" they were shouting. "Now, wouldn't that scald you!" fal tered the queen, and buret into tears. Detroit Journal. OUT Or REACH. "fleeklei" WoaM Ra-aaikt. Charles H. Acord, 41 years old, and John J. Lynch, aged 45, have filed pa pers In Indianapolis for re-enllstment In the regular army. They enlisted to gether in 1881, were "bunkles" for IS years, shared the perils of 11 battles and engagements at home and abroad, and now wish to re-enter the service together. ' Captain Edward - C, Raymond, who had an extensive acquaintance in Grand Army circles, expired auddenly or eart dlaeaae wnlia reading a pap at Oaleaburg. 111. During the civil war he was captain of Company A, Twenty-fourth Illinois Infantry. ' Tha dlsoatch adds that acord lag to reliable Intormatlni tha Bdtrs de not laLjod at prantt t taa itaaaMtic ataM. but will eaatlx.no in Boata Atti ea la atroag atwosh jo buk tha c4pk daal ha vmm waa tha lata atudaat who had m ' .affl Ttas. . fW-fca tt. CnA rwk ? - .rr'-arr, I tti rasji .can. laMraatlnr lact Falali as, The experiment ttatlon Record anotes from some experimentt of Prof. K. B. QOn H lOIIOWS: wnen pnaww are placed for a few minutes In brine tha Hahtest or those oi nooren vu- ty and moat deficient in sxarcn m w the top. By tnis metnou u n waa with the aid of a hydrometer to determine the amount oi eiarcn a sana the duality of the potatoes. The author planted Ue llgnt, tne niu and the heavy potatoes as indicated by the brine teat for two years la iineces- .im uii nnllka European invwua- tors, noted no WproTement in the quality of the crops aa a remit of this ..taction He found that tubers grow ing nearest the surface were of lowest specific gravity or poorest quality, and that the specinc grevuy - a aanth at which the potato grew. a.i. w. .M.ihaa a the cooler taBpera- tart at which un ww at greater depths. Haaltothat patatoe. grown It hrfal eattata, with Z7 rum " taww umm?51 I7fx tha aoU. had greater ap-rlhe gftTfty than those frown M aiiia. Parson Johnson Is turkeys' high, Brudder Snatcher?" Brother Snatcher Dey's done gone to the top branches, parson. hew mrauLAB pbotwvtion. From Cie Cleveland Plain Dealer: Yes, sir, I'm going to sell my watch dog and buy a goat" - Whatforr' 'Because just the ether day a New Jersey goat whipped the. socks off big fighting mastiff." Waa; tt a fair stand-up fight?' 'Not tor the dog. He couldn't stand up for a minute. That goat Jumped tor him and Jammed a bunch or oarxs ana erowls down his neck before you could say 'sick em: When ae putted tne aog In the piexue you could have heard tne hollow reverberation for naif a mue. And when the dog turned round to go to his comer the goat struck hint fast once on the exposed section ana him turn three summersaults vad cartwheel." " "Doa't yon object to the odor ef ash a household pet" "No, I doa't. I want ale so aMC3 that when burglars catch tha eC3t they'll eay Thoae people trp vd we'd better atoeey rltl ?. JCBT TAFFY THK VfirK. First clothing salesman I do hate to have a man bring In his wife when he wants a new suit. It Is a case of satis fying two, and the woman is the harder of the two. Second ditto That's because you don't know your business. I never try to convince the lady. : I Just compli ment her upon the beauty and fine set of her garments. Then I can ehotw any old thing onto her husband and nbe will Hiulle sweetly an we wmre. Boston Transcript. ' LACOBIira GAM. Towson 'Is your daughter a finish ed musician?" Yorkrode-'Not yet. but the neighbors are making threats." Baltimore American. gne "Were you ever troubled with dyspepsia?" He-"Xes, mais iae -a, it affects me." Yonkers Statesman. v No Maude, dear, the fellow who doesn't pay his club dues is not nec- essarlly a dude." Philadelphia Kecoro. Amateur "What does It; mean ln theatric circles wnen iney say iu- vhost walks?'" veteran Aor means that the rest of us don't hart to."-Detrolt Free Press. nmaiei Is a lucky man; his time ; soes right on whether he Is waking or sleeping, sick or well." "What ta Bta gles' business?" "Watchmaker."-Jo- lumbus (O.) ie joutusk "Thomas Tibbs Is in a recelvar'a hands." "What broke him apt" "Cia the tip system got started la hie eSap and he had to pay extra for every . of work his clerks dld.''-!n4lata Journal. Mother-"What type Ui the roaaf ; man that oar daughter says you net In New York when yea went to wrtcj. her home?' ratter "Well, ta JC. from hU clothes, I should asy he rti type." uctron rree atbcv ( tf M aOettCJ It CX f ,ctsi tr aa tamsxCjf - eJUfchr "t V 4 VIA f-Ta tSM wani a jpa, we aw