r She BondnvdLix By HALL CHAPTER III.-(Contlnued. He wan crushed, but be was strong of heart and would not despair. So be pushed on over this green plain. tnrough a bundred thousand mossy mounds that looked like the graves 01 a world of dead men. But when be came out of It bis case teemed yet more forlorn, for leaving the soft valley behind be bad come upon a lava stream, a sea of stones, not dust or cinders, but a bleached cake of lava rock, with never a soft place for the foot, and never a green spot for the eye. Not a leaf to rustle in the breeze, not a blade of grass to whisper to it, not a bird's sweet voice, or the song of running water. Noth ing lived there but dead silence on earth and In air. Nothing but that, or In other hours the roar of wind, the rattle of rain, and the crash of thunder. All this time Jason had walked on under the sweltering sun, never rest ing, never pausing, buoyed up with the hope of water water for the fainting man that he might not die. But in the desolation of that moment he dropped Sunlocks from his shoulder, and threw himself down beside htm. And sitting there, with the bead of his unconscious comrade upon his knees, he put It bimHelf to say what bad been the good of all that he had done, and If It would not have been better for them both If he had sub mitted to base tyranny and remained at the Mines. Had he not brought tbis man out to his death? What else was before him In this waste wilder ness, where was there a drop of water to cool his hot forehead or moisten his parched .tongue? And thinking that his yoke-fellow might die, and die at bis hands, and that he would then be alone, and the only man's face gone from him that bad ever brightened life for him, his heart be gan to waver and to say, "Rise up, Jason, rise up and go back." But Just then be was conscious of the click-clack of horses' hoofs on the echoing face of the stony sea about him, and he shaded his eyes and look ed around, and saw In the distance a line of men on ponies coming on In his direction. And though he thought of the guards that had been signalled to pursue him, he made no effort t3 escape. He did not stir or try to hide himself, but sat as before with toe head of bis comrade on his knees. The men on the ponies came up and passed him cloHely by without seeing him. But he saw tbem clearly and heard their talk. They were not the guairflj from the settlement, but Thing-men bound, for Tlilngvclllr and the meeting of Althing there. And while they weri going on before him in their laughter and high spirits, Ja son could scarce resist the impulse to cry out to them to stop and taUe him along with them as their prisoner, for that he was an outlaw who had broken his outlawry, and carried away this fainting man at his knees. But before the words would form themselves, and while his blistering lips were shaping to speak them, a great thought came to him, and struck him back to silence. Why had he torn away from the Sulphur Mines? Only from a gloomy love of life, life for his comrade, and life for n'mself. And what life was there in this trackless waste, this mouldering dumb wilderness? None, none. Nothing but death lay here; death in these gaunt solitudes; death in these dry deserts; death amid these ghastly, haggard wrecks of human things. What chance could there be of escape from Iceland? None, none, none. But there was one hope yet. Who were these men that had passed him? They were Thing-men; they were the lawmakers. Where were they going? They were going to the Mount of Laws. Why were they going there? To bold their meeting of Althing. What was Althing? The highest pow er of the State; the Supreme Court of legislature and law. What did all this mean? It meant that Jason aa an Icelander knew the laws of hit country, and that one great law above all other laws be remem bered at that Instant It concerned outlaws. And what were they but outlaws, both of them. It ordered that the condemned could appeal at Althing against the Injustice of his sentence. If the ranks of the Judges opened for his escape, then be was saved. Jason leaped to his feet at the thought of It That was what be would do for hi comrade and him self. He would push on to Thlngvelllr. It was Ave and thirty heavy miles away; but no matter for that The angel of hope would walk with him. Ha would reach the Mount of Laws, carrying bis comrade all the way. And when he got there, be would plead the cause of both of them. Then the Judge would rise, and part and make way for tbem, and they would be free men thereafter. Life, life,. life! There was left for both of them, and very aweet It seem ed after .the shadow of death that had m marly encompassed them. Only to lire! Only to live! They were young yet and loved one another as brothers. And while thinking so. la the whirl of his aensea as be strode to and fro over the lava blocks, Jaaon heard what his ear had hitherto been too heavy to catch, the thin music of falling water near at hand. And, look ing up, he saw a tiny rivulet like a lock of silken hair dropping over a round face of rock, and thanking God for It, he ran to It, and filled both hand with It, and brought It to Sun locks and bathed his forehead with It, and hla poor blinded eyes, and moist ened his withered Hps, whispering meantime words of hope and simple nothings, such as toy woman might croon over her sick boy. Tome, boy, come then, come, boy, come," he whispered, and clapped his moist kands together over the placid 6m to eat; It back to Itself. It Cos listed Stsrv. CAINC And while he did so, sure enough Sunlocks moved, his lips parted, his cheeks quivered, and he sighed. And seeing these signs of consciousness, Jason began to cry, for the great rude fellow who bad not flinched before death was touched at the sight of life In that deep place where the strongest man is aa a child. w But Just then he heard once more the sound of horses' hoofs on the lava ground, and, looking up, he saw that there was no error this time, and that the guards were surely coming. Ten or twelve of them there seemed to be, mounted on as many ponies, and they were driving on at a furious gallop over the stones. There was a dog racing In front of tbem, another dog was running at their heels, and with the barking of the dogs, the loud whoops of the men to urge the ponies along, and to the clatter of the ponies' hoofs, the plain rang and echoed. Jason saw that the guards were coming on In their direction. In three minutes more they would be upon them. They were taking the line fol lowed by the Thing-men. Would they pass them by unseen as the Thing men had passed them? That was not to be expected, for they were there to look for them. What was to be done? Jason looked behind him. Nothing was there but an implacable wall of stone, rising sheer up Into the sky, with never a bough, or tussock of grass to cling to that a man might climb. He looked around. The ground was covered with cracked domes like the arches of buried cities, but the caverns that lay beneath them were guarded by spiked Jaws which only a man's foot could slip through. Not a gap, not a hole to creep into; not a stone to crouch under; not a hush to hide behind; nothing In sight on any side but the bare, hard face of the wide sea of stone. There was not a moment to lose. Jason lifted Sunlocks tf his shoulder and crept along, bent nearly double, as silently and swiftly as he could go. And still behind him was the whoop of the men, the barking of the dogs and the clatter of hoofs. On and on he went, minute after precious minute. The ground became heavier at every stride with huge stones that tore his stockinged legs and mangled his feet In his thin skin shoes. But he recked nothing of this, o.- rejoiced in It, for the way was as rought for the guards behind him, and he could hear that the horses had been drawn up from their gallop to a slow paced walk. At each step he scoured the bleak plain for shelter, and at length he saw among piles of vitreous ftnara hummock of great slabs clashed together, with one side reitt open. It was like nothing else on earth but a tomb in an old burial ground, where the vaults have fallen in and wreckoi the monuments above them. Through the cankered lips of this hummock Into its gaping throat, Jason pushed the unconscious body of Sunlocks, and crept In after It. And lying there in the gloom he waited for the guards to come on, and as they came he strained his ears to catch the sound of the words that passed between them. "No, no, we're on the right course." said one voire. Mow hollow and far away it sounded: "You saw his foot marks on the moss that we's Just crossed over, a:id you'll seem them again on the clay we're coming t)." "You're wrong," said another voice, "we saw one man's footsteps only, and we are following two. "Don't I tell you the red man Is carrying the other." "All these miles? Impossible! Any how that's their course, not this." "Why so?" "Because they're bound for Hafna flord." "Why Hafnaflord?" "To take ship and clear away." "Tut. man. they've got bigger game than that. They're going to Reykja vik." "What! To run into the lion's mouth?" "Yes, and to draw his teeth, too. What has the Captain always said? Why, that the red man bas all along been spy for the fair one, and we know who he Is. Let him once set foot in Reykjavik and he'll do over again what he did before." Crouching over Sunlocks In the darkness of that grim vault, Jason heard these words as the guards rode past him in the glare of the hot sun, and not until they were gone did he draw bis breath. But Just as he lay back with a sigh of relief, thinking all danger over, suddenly he heard a sound that startled him. It was the sniffling of a dog outside his hiding place, and at the next moment two glittering eyes looked In upon him from the gap whereby he had entered. The dog growled, and Jason tried to pacify It. It barked, and then Jason laid bold of It, and gripped It about the throat to silence it. It fumed and fought, but Jason held It like a vice, until there came a whistle and a call, and then It struggled afresh. "Erik!" shouted a voice without. "Erik, Erik!" and then whistle fol lowed whistle. Thinking the creature would now follow Its master, Jason was for re leasing It, but before he had yet fully done so the dog growled and barked again. "Erik! Erik!" shouted the voice outside, and from the click-clack of hoofs, Jason Judged that one of the men was returning. Then Jason saw that there was nothing left to him but to quiet the dog, or It would betray them to their death; so, while the brute writhed In his great hands, struggling to tear the flesh from them, he laid hold of Its Jaws and rived them apart and broke them. In a moment more the dog was desd. In the silence that followed, a faint voire came from the distance, crying, "fl'urd, Slguard, why are ftm wait ing!" And then another voice shouted hack from near at band very near, so bear as to seem to be on top of the hummock, "I've lost my dog; and I could swear I beard him growling somewhere hereabouts not a minute since." Jason was holding his breath again, when suddenly a deep sigh came from Sunlocks; thea another, and another, and then some rambling words that had. no meaning, but made a dull hum in that hollow place, rne man out side must have heard something, fur he called bis dog again. At that Jason's heart fell low, and all he could do he did he reached over the stretched form of bis com rade, and put bis Hps to the lips tf Sunlocks, Just that be might smother their deadly babble with noiseless kisses. This must have served, for wben the voice that was far away shouted again, "Sigurd! Sigurd!" the voice that was near at hand answered, "Coming." And a moment later, Jason beard the sounds of hoofs going off from bim as before. , Then Michael Sunlocks awoke to full consciousness, and realized his state, and what had befallen bim, and where he was, and who was with bim. At first he was overwhelmed by a tempest of agony at feeling that he was a lost and forlorn man, blind and maimerd, at it seemed at that time, for all the rest of his life to come. After that he cried for water, saying that his throat was baked and bis tongue cranked,' and Jason . replied that all the water they had found that day tbey had been forced to leave be hind them where they could never re turn to It Then he poured out a tor rent -of hot reproaches, calling on Jason to say why he had been brought out there to go mad of thirst; atul Jason listened to all and made.jio answer, but stood with bent head, ami quivering Hps, and great tear-drop3 ou bis rugged cheeks. -- ' The spasm of agony and an;;?r soon passed, as Jason knew it muni, and then, full of remorse, Sunlocks saw everything In a new light "What time of day is it?" he asked. "Evening," said Jason. "How many hours since we left Kii suvlk?" "Ten." "How many miles from there?" "Twenty." "Have you carried me all the way?' "Yes." There was a moment's pause, then an audible sob, and then Sunlocks feit for Jason's hand and drew it down to his Hps. That kiss was more than Jason couli bear, though he bore the hot words well enough; so he made a brave show of unconcern, and rattled on wlto hopeful talk, saying where they wers to go, and what he was to do for both of them, and how they would be free men to-morrow. And as he talked' of the great ta.sk that waa before them, his heart grew strong again, and Sunlocks caught the contagion of his spirit and cried, "Yes, yes, let us set off. I can walk aloes now. Come, let us go." At that Jason drew Sunlocks out of the hummock, and helped him to hla feet. "You are weak still," he said. "Let me carry you again." "No, no, I am strong. Give me your hand. That's enough," said Sunlocks. (To be continued.) Econo--rI Royal Gift. Queen Vic -rla'g favorite form of gift was t.n Indjan shawl. Thousands of theae articles of attire were present ed by her in the course of her long reign. King Edward 3 exhibiting a partiality for distributing etchings and engravings among his friends. His majesty, who, while Prince of Wales, was an Industrious collector of "black and white" drawings, found himself the possessor of thousands of duplicate copies of published works of art upon succeeding to hl3 mother's unique collection. He hag therefore set apart a big store of drawings to be turned to whenever he desires to make a personal gift. Wben one con siders, that apart from frequent lib eral purchases of works of art, botfc Queen Victoria and King Edward ac cepted copies of the majority of no table etchings and engravings pub lished In the last quarter of a century and more, the magnitude of his maj esty's present collection can be imag ined. His friends are naturally grati fied that he has decided to weed it out tor their benefit. Leeds Mercury. , TlotaM an Itallaa RWert. The crop of violets on the Italian Riviera bas been ruined owing to the bad reason. The growers have all suf fered beavy losses, and the Russian General Oorloff has sent 150,000 franca to the Russian consul at San Remo to be distributed among the poorest of the peasant growers In order that tbey may not be discouraged by this sea son's failure and to help them toward a better crop next year. Kinship Among Pimm. A cross between a headless cabbage and the turnip produced the rape plant Cabbages and turnips them selves are relatives; the lettuce plant also claims near kin to tbem, and far back In plant life grew a parent plant with some of the characteristics that each now claims as Its own, from which all three, and many another plant also, descended. NTr Rod on a Railway, Mrs. 8. P. Mitchell, the oldest resi dent of Fayette, Mo., now In her 100th year, hss never ridden on a railway. When the first train passed through Fsyette, she went down to look at It She vowed that she would never ride In one of "them wagons" for anything In the world, and she has kept her word. EleaaaaU la Slav Paraana. The observations concerning the new star In Perseus show that the star con tains such substances ss hydrogen, so dium, helium, calcium, magnesium and eoronlum. The shifting of the spectral lines shows that ths new star Is mov ing away from toe earth at a low vs. locitr. UKINK WATER FOR 6TIIE DECK. "The simplest temporary cure for a stiff neck or any similar attack of the muscles anywhere, explained a well known physician to a Washington Star reporter, "is the very free drinking of water. A large glass full of water every half hour or even oftener, should be taken and the treatment kept up for at least half a day. This, it must be remembered, only cures the effects and unless it Is kept up for a long time will hardly get at the cause, which Is now generally understood to be an excess of uric acid in the blood. The cause of a very large amount of water baa a tendency to dilute the blood and Increase the supply of the lubricants about the sheaths of the muscles. It Is the deficiency of those lubricants that produces what are known as stiff necks, stiff shoulders and the like. Nearly all of the so-called mineral wa ters can be used and those that have lime, iron, potash, lithia or sodium should be preferred If they are handy, but If none of them are getable tb ordinary drinking waters, hydrant, well or spring, can be used. The point Is to get an extraordinary amount, so as to dilute the blood as rapidly aa possible. I have no objection to the use of lini ments or external use of lubricants, but water can be depended upon if per sisted In to do almost the same thing. Medical treatment, if people do not care to keep up the water treatment. Is necessary, however, to keep from a recurrence of the attack. I really think the success of many of the fa mous water cures Is not the quality of the water used, but the quantity of tt. None of the water cures would think of promising any cure or relief even in the use of three or four glasses of water In a day, but they have but little hesitancy In doing so If from thirty to forty glasses are used each day. For the same reason If a cure Is expected from drinking water a very large quan tity of it must bo drunk. Six hours' treatment, however, should cure th ordinary stiff neck." AN OPTICAL ILLl'HION. it This diagram, taken from the New York Herald, is one of the best optical illusions that we have seen in a long time. Look at it in the ordinary way, and you cannot persuade yourself that the long up-and-down lines are parallel, but hold It on a level with your eye and look at It endwise and you will see that tbey are. SYMPTOMS Or tOMSCMl-TIOX. Now that the value of the open-air treatment of consumption has been demonstrated, the great Importance of an early diagnosis of the disease Is ev ident Unfortunately, It Is by no means easy to recognize the disease In Its iuciplency, for the early symptoms are not distinctive, and the cause of the failing health Is often not suspected until the disease has become firmly es tablished. The symptoms calling at tention especially to disease of the lungs are generally late in appearing, and the physician's suspicions will usually have been aroused long before there la any severe cough or profuse, expectoration. At first there is merely a falling off In health; the person Is "a little below par," and his friends remark that he Is losing flesh. He is not actually ill, and his condition causes him little anxiety, being attrib uted to a rush of work, or to worri mnt caused by a business hitch or some family trouble. But as time goes on and the supposed cause " of the trouble has been removed, the patient does not recover his strength; on the contrary, the gradual decline continues and a noticeable pallor appears. The lips are bluish, the eyes are abnor mally white, the pinkish hue of the nails fade out, the mucous membrane of the mouth Is pale In medical lan guage, the patient la anemic. This pallor is a suspicious sign; an another symptom of marked slgnlflcence is a rapid pulse, one that beats continu ously ninety or one hundred times a minute. At this time there Is usually also, more or less fever, although It may he so slight as to be detected only by a frequent use of the thermometer. A fourth symptom of importance Is In creased perspiration, usually most marked In the first hours after mid night night sweats but sometimes troublesome In the daytime as welt. Cough during this period is aa often absent an present, and In any esse Is seldom more than a nervous backing; later it becomes more persistent, and some expectoration appears. But by this time the phylslclan can generally detect signs of lung trouble by an ex amination of the chest and the discov WW: M tl ery of tubercle bacilli when the ex pectorated matter Is studied under the microscope will remove all doubts as the nature of the malady. Of course one who bas persistent anemia, a rapid pulse, night sweats, and perhaps fever, is not necessarily In the early stages of consumption, although there is ground for suspicion. Even If he is, however, there need be no excessive alarm, for the disease at this stage is almost positively curable, and Its early detection is therefore a blessing. A SOLAR MOTOR. A practical demonstration of the pos sibility of running a steam engine with THE SOLAR MOTOR, heat derived directly from the sttB shine has been made at Los Angeles, Col. The rays of the sun are focused' upon a boiler by means of a reflector 83 feet In diameter, composed of 1,788 small mirrors which are so adjusted that they all concentrate the sunlight upon a single central point. The heat developed Is sufficient to melt copper, and a wooden pole thrust Into the fo cus bursts into flame at once. The steam from the suspended boiler Is carried to the engine through a flexi ble tube. An energy of 15 horse-power is developed and used to pump water for Irrigation. The reflector Is mounted like an astronomical telescope and kept facing the sun by a driving clock.. "ELECTRIC GHOSTS." Dr. Oliver J. Lodge, in an address to electrical engineers In Birmingham on February 27th, thus defined an elec tron, that new term of science which bas recently assumed so much import ance: An atom Is ordinarily associated with a charge, and force is required to separate the charge from the atom. The atom charge, when separated, is called an electron. In an electrolyte, 1. e., a substance decomposed by an electric current, there Is a bodily trans fer of atoms with the charges; In a metallic conductor the charges are handed on, as electrons, from atom to atom. In the discharge through high ly rarefied gases the electric current Is In Its most simple form, "for here there Is a flow of electrons traveling by themselves, of disembodied charges or electric ghosts." Electrons, Dr, Lodge added, are the fastest moying of all known terrrestrial objects, their speed being one-tenth that of light, which Is 120,300 miles per second. EIGHT MILES CP. The exploration of the air by means of balloons carrying self-registering instruments is pursued with much vig or In Europe. On February 7th there were simultaneous ascents from many points extending from France to Aus tria and Russia. One unmanned bal loon near Paris reached an elevation of 41,656 feet, not much short of eight miles. The temperature of the air at that height as shown by a self-registering thermometer, was 67 degrees below zero, Fahrenheit Another bal looon near Berlin found the same tem: perature at an elevation 10,000 feet less. These experiments are expected to throw much light cm the laws of storms and of atmospheric circulation. NOTES OK SCIENCE. Bow tna Spaart of Ship It Meainrad. The speed of a ship Is measured by a log line a cord knotted every fifty-one feet; 120 of these lengths make a geo graphical mile. At one end of the line ia the log, a piece of flat, light wood, generally triangular, and weighted along one edge, so that when thrown overboard it floats vertically with lta flat face to the ship, and theoretically stationary.' The number of knots In the cord being equal to the number of half minutes in an hour. It follows that aa many knots as pass over the stern every half minute, so many geo graphical miles or knots are being made In an hour. Ufa Naar the Eqaater. The Reverend Father Grispn of Stan ley Falls, Africa, writes that Euro peans have a very Inaccurate Idea of tropical temperatures. He passed eight years at the equator on the Pacific ccast, be says, and never saw the mer cury above 85 degrees, while at Stanley Falls the maximum Is 90 degrees, and the nights are dellclously cool. On the other hand, there are frequent temp ests of indescribable violence, and Father Orison has counted 66 lightning flashes In one minute, the thunder be ing continuous and has seen ten thun derbolts strike within a radius of a few hundred meters In the space of two hours. Generosity makes many acaualnt- ances. but It doesn't know Its friends until Adversity singles tbem out In dianapolis News. NEW YORK'S WIS MJlAMt Thar Kaow Flak Day aad she Milan f jIIIbc Day. Every day is In a measure a flsh day at Fulton market, but the seagulls know the chief fish day of the week, says the New York Sun. It Is thea that they feast to their hearts' content Their coming and going has for years amused and interested the ferryboat passengers, and some of the latter have been observed to look up from their papers, glance out of the cabin win dows, catch sight of the army of gulls and exclaim, "Bless me, there are the gulls. It is Friday again." The long-winged travelers of the sea are always to be seen in the East river, opposite Fulton market in the day time, but tbey gather there In greater numbers on Friday because so much refuse Is thrown away that day. They hover over the surface of the water by hundreds, taking from the water such food as is to their liking. They are the scavengers of the East River in this respect. The Intelligence of the gulls is remarkable in one way. Besides knowing which Is the big flsh day on the East river, they know the chief sailing days on the North river. The American line usually dispatches a steamer for Southampton at 10 a. m., every Wednesday. Some minutes be fore the ship leaves the pier the circl ing of the gulls In midstream begins The birds know from experience that before the ship leaves quantities of food are thrown from the ship's ports and they make a dash to recover it the moment the ship pulls out. It is amusing to watch one of the gulls try ing to lift from the water a piece of food twice as heavy as itself. Some times these gulls will hover around the American Line pier until noon of Wednesday. At this hour the Red Star liner starts for Antwerp, leaving the water of the slip filled with discarded food. More frequently, however, the birds will hurry off to the White Star line piers directly after the American liner leaves her wharf. The White Star steamer sails each Wednesday at noon. On Saturdays and Thursdays the gulls go to Hoboken to get what the Hamburg-American liners leave behind. These are about the only lines that have a fixed hour for sailing and the gulls have become acquainted with the fact. The harbor gulls fare better than their kind far out at sea. The; latter frequently have to follow a ship for days to supply the demands of their appetite. A RAZOR-BACK'S SENSE. One Caaa, at Leaat, In Which Bog Wai Stupid. But while dogs have been celebrated for semi-human intelligence, and cat tle have been known to evince, some practical understanding, it was a sur prise to discover something like Intel-, ligence in an animal whose stupidly had given occasion for a proverb. Not long ago one of the rasor-back swine indigenuous to the State made an essay on the fence of a place nearby. "Jt had been the site of a sawmill, and the fence was built of waste boards re maining after the removal of the works. The boar commenced his at tack at the end of the board part of the fence by swaying sidewire as far as possible without losing balance, and then hurling his bulk against the board as close as he could to the post. He bad apparently decided that draw ing out the nails would be the easier manner of entrance. The force of im pact wa3 really formidable, and tha atchers of his movements were not a little fearful of his success. . After several unsuccessful attempts, he de sisted, but went grunting along the fence as If examining the quality of the lumber until a split plank was found. A sharp crack followed the throwing of himself against this. He returned to the charge again and again until the barrier was removed, when. with a astiBfied grunt and a squeal of invitation to bis numerous family, his long bristly snout appeared through the opening. Our Animal Friends. Cata to Eradicate Rabbits. Australian papers state that the ex periment of the West Australian gov ernment In turning domestic cats loose in the southeastern districts of the colony to check the invasion of rabbits from South Australia has been a pronounced success. The felitfes destroyed immense numbers of the nests, and in some cases almost clear ed the squatters' runs of the rabbits. In anticipation of the demand which ts expected for cats for this work breeding establishments are being started. It is believed, however, that it will be found much cheaper to import the animals. Ejecting Fauenfer from Straet Car, A passenger on a street car who acts In such a manner aa to Justify the In ference that he Is intoxicated, and falls Into a sleep from which the conductor falls to arouse him by shaking him, may be ejected, holds the Supreme Ju dicial Court of Massachusetts, In the case of Hudson vs. Lynn and B. R. R. (59 N. E. Rep., 647), but the court holds further that it Is not due care to put hlm.on a dark and stormy night, in an unllghted road some distance from buildings, though street cars are passing at the time and teams are likely to pass. Oladstoae's Daacbter Aeeepte Paalllaa. Miss Helen Gladstone, daughter of the late William E. Gladstone, has ac cepted the post of warden of the Wom en's University settlement, Southwark, London. Miss Gladstone will go Into residence early In September. roWav Ravfciwtlaa af the stow. Forty-four years ago the Kansas Kaw river was navigated from Its mouth up as far as Lawrence. Now railroad: tfo.tof business.