The Riser's By HON RE CHAPTER V. (Continued! "Come slung, Cruchot." said Uraudet. addressing the notary, "Vou are on of ay frieudu; I am going to show jou hat piece of fllj it U to plant poplar in food aail '' "Then the sixty thousand franca that ri fingered for those poplars of yours the meadowa by the Loire are a mere trifle to you?" aaid C'nirhot, opening bis yea wide in his bewilderment. "And uch luck as you had, too! Kell tng your timber just when there was no white wood to be had in Nantes, so that very trunk fetched tliirty francs!" Eugenie heard and did not hear, ut terly unconscious that the most critical moment of her life was rapidly approach ing, that a paternal and sovereign decree wai about to be pronounced, and that the Id netary waa to bring all this about. Grandet had reached the magnificent meadow land by the Loire. Some thirty laborers were busy digging out the roots f the poplars that ouce stood there, fill ing up the holes that were left and level ing the ground. "Jean." he called to one of the hon ors, "fill up all the holes except those Jong the riverside, where you can plant those poplar saplings that I bought If you set them along by the Loire they will grow there finely at the eipeuse of the government." he added, aud as he looked round at Cruchot the wen on his pose twitched slightly, the most sardonic mile could not have aaid more. "Yes, it is clear enough, poplars should nly b planted In poor soil," said Cru chot, quite overcome with amazement at Grandet'a astuteness. "Y e a, sir," aaid the cooper iron ically. Eugenie waa looking out over the glorious landscape and along the Loire, without heeding her father's words; but Cruchot'a talk with his client took an other turn, and her attention w as sudden ly aroused. "So you have a son-in-law come from Paris; they are talking about nothing but your nephew in all Saumur. I shall oon have settlements to draw up; eh, ere Graudet?" "Did you come out early to t t tell tne that?" inquired Grandet. and again the wen twitched. "Very well, you are a old crony of mine; I will be plain with, and t t tell you what you w want to know. I would rather 0!ug my 4 -d da lighter into the Loire, look jon, than g give her to her cousin. Vou lean give that out. But, no; 1 1 let beople gosnip." f Everything swam before Entente's yes. Her vague hopes or distant hap piness had suddenly taken definite shape, tad sprung up and blossomed, and then Bar harvest of flowers bad been as sud denly cut down and lay on the earth, f luce yesterday she had woven the bands Of happiness that unite two souls, and Venceforward sorrow, it seemed, was to trengthen them. Is it not written in the noble destiny of woman that the grandeur of sorrow should touch her tnore closely than all the pomp and splen dor, of fortune? How came It that a father's feelings had been extinguished? What crime could be laid at Charles' door? Myste rious questions! Mysterious and sad fore bodings already surrounded her growing love, that mystery withiu her soul. When they turned to go home again she trem bled In every limb; and as they weot up the shady street, along which she bad lately gone so joyously, the shadows look ad gloomy, the air she breathed seemed fall of the melancholy of autumn, every thing about her was sad. Love, that had brought these keener perceptions, was quick to interpret every boding sign. As they neared home, she walked on ahead of her father, knocked at the bouse door, and stood waiting beside it But Gran det, seeing that the notary carried a newspaper still in its wrapper, asked, "How are consols?" "I know yon will not take my advice, Grandet," Cruchot replied. "You should bay at once; the chance of making twen ty per cent on them in two years is still open to you. Yon can buy now at eighty francs fifty centimes." "We shall see," remarked Grandet pen sively, rubbing his chin. "Great heavens!" exclaimed the no tary, who by this time bad unfolded bis newspaper. "Well, what Is itr cried Grandet as jCrnchot put the paper in his hands and aid: "Read that paragraph." ' "M. Grandet, one of the most highly respected merchants ia Paris, shot him self through the head yesterday after noon, after putting In an appearance on 'Chang as usual. He bad previously sent in his resignation to the President, resigning his position as Judge of the Tribunal of Commerce. His affairs had become involved through the failures of bis stock broker and notary. M. Gran det, whose character was very greatly esteemed, and whose credit stood high, would no doubt have found temporary assistance on the market which would have enabled him to tide over his diffi culties. It is to be regretted that a man of auch high character should have given way to the first Impulse of despair " and so forth, and so forth. CHAPTER VL "I knew It," the old vine grower said. Phlegmatic though Cruchot was, he felt a horrible shudder run through him t the words; perhaps Grandet of Paris bad stretched imploring hands in vain to the millions of Grandet of Saumur; the Mood ran cold in his vein's. "And bis son?" he asked presently; "he ss in such spirit yesterday even ing." "Hie son knows nothing as jet," Gran det answered, imperturbable as ever. "Good morning, M. Grandet," said Cruchot. He understood the position Mir, lad went to reassure kite President 4e Boston. , Grandet foaod breakfast ready. Mine. Grandet waa already anted In her chair, aaoaatod on the wooden Moeka, and kntt- -tatf woolen eaffe for the winter. Enge ie ran to her mother and pot her anna : hor, with th anger hanger for that ceenaa of hidden troobU. "lot na gat row hroakfaot," aaid ' r 1 -arb taSn lewnotairn hi harry; l iiC-t s3toro. Co loon Daughter DE BALZAC and called him, but it was all one, be . never heard me." j "Let him sleep," said Grandet; "he i will wake soon enough to hear bad news, i in any case." j "What is the matter?" asked Eugenie. She was putting into her cup the two smallest lumps of sugar, weighing good ness knows how many grains; her worthy parent was wont to a mute himself by cutting up sugar whenever he had noth ing better to do. "His father has blown bis brains out" "Oh! that poor boy!" cried Mme. Gran det. 'Toor indeed!" said Grandet; "he has not a penny." "Ah, well! he is sleeping as if he were the king of all the world," ssid Nanon pityingly. Eugenie could not eat Her heart was wrung as a woman's heart can be when for the first time her whole soul is filled with sorrow snd compasslou for the sor row of one she lores. She burst into tears. "You did not know your oncle, so what is there to cry shout?" said her father, with a glance like a hungry tiger's; just such a glance as he could give, no doubt, to his heaps of gold. "Hut who wouldn't feel sorry for the poor young man, sir?" said the serving maid; "sleeping there like a log, and knowing nothing of his fate." "I did not speak to you, Nanon! Hold yonr tongue!" In that moment Eugenie learned that a woman who loves must dissemble her feelings. She was silent "Until I come back, Mme. Grandet. you will say nothing about him, I hope." ths old cooper continued. "They are making a ditch in my meadows, and I must go and see after it. I shall come back for the second breakfast at noon, and then my nephew and I will hove a talk atiout his affairs. As for you, Made moiselle Eugenie, if you are crying over that popinjay, let us have no more of it. child. He will be off post-haste to the Indies directly, and you will never set eyes on him any more." Her father took up his glove, which were lying on the rim of his hat, put them on in his cool, deliberate way, and then he wer.t out "Ob! mamma, 1 can scarcely breathe!" cried Eugenie when she was slone with her mother; "I have never suffered like this!" This nervous excitement In one who was usually so quiet and self-possessed produced an effect on Mme. Grandet. She looked at her daughter, and her mother's love snd sympathetic instinct tcld her everything. "My poor little sir!!" said Mme. Gran det drawing Eugenie's head down till It rested upon her bosom. Her daughter lifted her face, and gave her mother a questioning look, which seemed to read her inmost thoughts. "Why must he be sent to the Indies?" said the girl. "If he is in trouble, ought he not to stay here with us? Is he not our nearest relation?" "Yes, dear child, that would only be natural; but your father has reasons for what he does, and we must respect them." Mother and daughter sat in silence; the one on her chair mounted on the wooden blocks, the other in her little armchair. Both women took up tneir needlework. Oogenic felt that her mother understood ber, and her heart was full of gratitude for such tender sympathy. "How kind you are, dear mamma!" she aaid, as she took her mother's hand and kissed it "Do you like him?" For an answer Mme. Grandet smiled. Then, after a moment's pause, she mur mured. "You cannot surely love him al ready? That would be a pity." "Why would it be a pity?" asked Eu genie. "You like him, Nanon likes him, why should I not like him. too? Now, then, mamma, let us set the table for bis breakfast" She threw down her work, and her mother followed her example, saying as she did so, "You are a mad girl!" Bnt none the less did she sanction ber daughter's freak by assisting in it Charles, after making innumerable pi rouettes around his room, came down at last, sinking gay little snatches of song. He had taken much pains with his ap pearance, and now he came in with that gracious sir of condescension which sits not ill on youth and which gave Eugenie a melancholy pleasure. He went up to bis aunt quite gayly. "I hope you slept well, dear aunt? And yon. too. cousin V "Cousin, you must be hungry," said Eugenie. "Sit down." "Oh, I never breakfast before twelve o'clock, just after I rise. But I have fared so badly on my Journey that I will yield to persuasion. Besides" he drew out a dainty little watch "dear me, it Is only eleven o'clock! I have been up be times." "Up betimes?" asked Mme. Grandet "Yes, but I wanted to set my things straight Well, I am quite ready for something, something not very substan tial, a fowl or a partridge." "A partridge," Eugenie said to her self. She would willingly bare given all sho had for one. "Come and take your seat," said Mme. Grandet, addressing her nephew. The dandy sank into the armchair la a graceful attitude, much as a prett) woman might recline on her sofa. En genie and her mother drew their chairs to the tire and sat near him. "Do you always live here?" Charles inquired, thinking that the mom looked even more hideous by daylight than by candle light "Always," Eugenie answered, watch ing him she spoke. "Always, ex cept during the vintage. Then we go to help Nanon, and wo all stay at the Ab bey at Noysrs." "Do yon never take a walk?" "Sometimes, oa Sundays, when it U fiaa, wo walk down an far aa the h ridge," id Mm Oraadot, "or wo sometimes go to see them cutting the hay." , "Have ro theater bereT" "Go to the play!" eried Mme. Gran- dot; "go to too play acton! Why, air, stniM know that that la a mortal do yoi ur afe" MM M -""uiT,r'chickeuti,LET US ALL LAUGH. "Oh, new-laid eggs!" said Charles, who, after the manaer of those accus tomed te luxury, had quite forgotten ail about liia partridge. "Delirium! Da you happen to have any butter, eh, my good girl?" "Butter? If yon have butter bow, you will have no cake by and by," sals' the handmaid. "Yes, of course, Nanon; bring somt butter," cried Eugenie. The young girl watched her cousit while be cur his bread and butter lots strips, and felt happf. The most ro mantic shopgirl in Paris could not inort thoroughly enjoy the spectacle of iuna cence triumphant in a melodrama, li must be conceded that Charles, who bad bees brought up by a graceful and charming mother, and had received bit "finishing education" from an accom plished woman of the world, was as dain ty, neat and elegant In bis ways as snj coxcomb of the gentler sex. The girl'l quiet sympathy produced sn almost mag netic effect. Charles, finding himself thul waited upon by his cousin and aunt, could not resist the influence of theii overflowing kindness. He wss radiant with good humor, and the look he gaxY Engeuie w as almost a smile. As he look ed at her more closely he noticed hel pure, regular features, her uuconscioui attitude, the wonderful clearness of hel eyes, in which love sparkled, though sht as yet knew nothing of love but its pala and a wistful longing. "Iteally, my dear cousin." he said, "ii you were in a box at the opera and Is evening dress, and I would answer foi it, my aunt's remark about deadly sis would be justified, all the nien would bt envious, and all the women jealous." ! Eugenie's heart beat fast with Joy al this compliment, though it conveyed n meaning whatever to her mind. "You are laughing at a poor littls country cousin," she said. "If you knew me better, consln, yoi would know that I detest banter; It st-ari tbe heart and deadens the feelings." Ana he swallowed down a strip of bread and butter with perfect satisfaction. "No," be continued, "I never nmke fun of oth ers, very likely because I have not wil enough. They have a deadly trick in Paris saying, 'He is so good natured,' which, being interpreted, means "tin por youth is as stupid .s a rhinoceros.' But as 1 happen to be rich, and it ii known that I enn hit the bull's ejt straight off at thirty paces, with any kind of pistol, anywhere, these witticismi are not leveled at me." "It is evident from what you say, nephew," said lime. Grandet gravely, "that you have a kind heart," "That Is a Tery pretty rin? of yours," said Kusenie: "is there any harm in ask ing to see it?" Charles took off the ring and held II out; Eugenie reddened as her cousiu'i rose pink nails came in contact with hei finger tips. "Mother, only see how fine the work, is!" "Oh, what a lot of gold there is is It!" said Nanon, who brought in the cof fee. "What Is that?" asked Charles, laugh ing, as he pointed to an oval pipkin, made of glazed brown earthenware, orna mented without by a circular fringe ol ashes. It waa full of a brown, boiIin liquid. In which coffee grounds were vis ible, as they rose to the surface au4 fell again. "Coffee; boiling hot!" answered Na non. "Oh, my dear aunt, I must nt least leave some beneficent trace of my stsy here. You are a long way behind thi times! I will show you how to make de cent coffee." Forthwith he endeavored to explain the principles involved. "Bless me; if there is all that to d about it," said Nanon, "you would havi to give your whole time to It I'll nevei make coffee that way, I know. Who Ii to cut the grass fur our cow while I an looking after the coffee pot?" "I would do it," said Eugenie. "Child!" said Mme. Grandet. with a look at her daughter; and at the won' came a awift recollection of the misery about to overwhelm the uuconscioui young man, and the three women were suddenly silent, and gaied pityingly at him. He could not understand it Just at that moment Mme. Grandet Eugenie and Nanon, who could not think of the cooper's return without shudder ing, heard the familiar knock at thf door. "That is paps!" said Eugenie. She took away the saucer full ol sugar, leaving one or two lumps on th tablecloth. Nanon hurried away with the egg cups. Mme. Graudet started up like a frightened fawn. There was t sudden panic of terror, which amazed Charles, who was quite at a loss to ac count for it "Why, what is the matter?" he asked. "My father is coming in," explained Eugenie. (To be continued.) Thluetlan Odd It lee. The ways of the Thlbetlaos are past comprehension, and It la no wonder that tbe English expedition to their sacred city, Lassa, are meeting with many difficulties other than those duo to the natural ruggodness of tbla ex tremely mountainous country. Llttlo Is known about this strange region, but that little give it a decSre3ry bad fig' vor. The people are extravagantly fond of dazzling Jewelry of all kinds. Un man bodies are fed to bald-headed eagles and dogs. Some are thrown Into the river and burned, but as a rule cremation la rare. .. Small-pox, which flourishes In all countries, regardless of race, language or custom, has piay- ed great havoc in Thibet More thai 6,000 fatal cases are on record, but ths population continues to Increase Just the same. Several Europeans have entered Las sa l nee the expulsion of tbe French priests Hue and Gabet in 1840. In stead of being sent away they wen cared for and given much good food -poisoned. Onco two foreigners and foreign woman came within a day's Journey of Laaaa. They were permit ted to send for food and were not pot toned, bat they were not allowed hi enter the sacred city. A woman never realises that the has done something wonderful after stop tag backward oft a otreot car tad wltt her Ufo. JOKES FROM THE PENS OF VA RIOUS HUMORISTS. Pleasant Incident Oi-cwrrinsj I be World Ovri Hayinga that Are Cheer ful to Old or Young-Fnnnjr Selec tions that Ton Will Knjoy. Tom But why did you bare a boy deliver your wedding Invitation in stead of sending tbeiu by mall? Jack Couldn't afford to tale chance." Tom ("UatM-e of what? Jack Being arrested. Don't yon know it la unlawful to (tend lottery tickets through the mails? Keal Thing. "Yes," remarked the bald -beaded jiiati, "uiy wife Is president of a secret Society." "Nonsense!" rejolnisl the fussy nll lmi'bi'lor. "Tlie Idea of women bavin.; anything to do with secret societies. "But." explained be of the n l.eul hair, "thin Is a society In which the members exchange se.reis." Same Old Fall Down. '. ib-itr, Is It KoinK to fall ilnwr niiinV" "I'nll down flL-nln? Wliv. condemn (lie tiling. It Imsn't tiuit fallinir down (lie Urst time yet?" ('liiniiro Tribune. liver Notice It? SiinkliiH Whiit Is the diameter of a Fllver dollar? Tliiikins Oh, it varies. Si mkliiH How's tbiit? Timklns It is smaller on pay day 1 ha ti It Is a few dnvs Inter. Hidn't Worry Hint. Ht My brother frets more than ;! hundred love letters every lny. Him You don't say! And !o s h answer all of them? Her No. indeed! He gets thetn re- cane he's a letter carrier. Ktaiie vw- Keul Life. McFIub There's a heap of differ ence iK'tween real life and the Ktnj.'. rUeetb As to how? McFIub Well, ou the staee when the hero gets In trouble the heroins hollers. "I'll never I e leve it." But in real life she generally nays, "Just wh it expected." riiiladelphiit Bulletin. Almost the Home Tiling. "I understand you were carried sway by her singing." "Well, not rjuitp that; I was drivn sway by It, though!" New Orleans Times-Democrat. Only Two, "This dispatch," said the as-lstai:! editor, "says that 'one of the Kussiar. ships remaining at I'ort Arthur did gallant work during the last attack. I wonder which one it was." "Oh! give the Kussian full credit," replied the editor. "Make it read. 'Ixrth of the Russian ships, etc.' " Philadelphia Ledger. The Kurlv Variety. "Are those four o'clock Y" "Not yet I should Judge that thej were about twenty-minutes-aftcr-twoi to-day." Romewhiit I'uullinlic. Mrs. Churchieltch They sny otll new minister Is what they call a fight in; parson. Chun-hlelgh All ministers are fight ing pursuits, my dear. Mrs. Cliurchlelgh How's that? Chnri-hlelKh They put a ktt of pen pie to sleep. Another View. "Waal, nobody can't nay Ephrnlia didn't love his wife," remarked Farm- e.' Goodman at the funeral; "see bow he's a-cryln'." "Il'm!" remarked Mrs. Crabtreo; "they do say thet some men cry w'eu Ihey think o the entry expense they got to meet." Philadelphia Tress. A IHttiinou Truth. 8lduey Talk Is silver silence it golden. Rodney Nonsense; Iota of talk it fyoro brass. fHE FIELD OF BATTLE HCIDENTS AND ANECDOTES OF THE WAR. fhe teraaw at tbe Bebelliosi Tell Whistling Ballet Bright Boyosteta, Bn retina Boats. Bla Battles, Cam riro, restive Bags, Btc Bsb . "I was much interested." said W. I- ' lappley. formerly boatsweiu's mate of . be 1'. S. S. I'inola. "in the story of J he mn who saved Sherman's am- ; uunltion at Resaca. 1 have another j nstanee of self sacrificing braery i bich ha received no mention in ottl lal reixirts or In print My part in he story U that of an eyewitness to a hiring deed. I will say briefly that I M-rved four years In the navy and that ii April, 1H;"J, I was Is.atswaln's m ite m the gmilsut Plnola, on the lower Mississippi, under Farragut. "At that time Farragut's fleet and lie mortar Isiats were bom Harding rort Jackson and St Philip. The gmi oats were engaged dally, and would mi up close to the chain stretched icross the river Just below the form nils obstructed the channel at a isiint vhere vessels stopped by the sunken bain would lie under tire of the forts, md Farragut dechh-d to remove the )l)stru tioii before making attack In 'on e. The gunlsiats I'inola and Pasi-a sere chosen for the work, ami the at tempt was made on the very dirk ilght of April 'U "Our luat was In charge of Com-iia:idi-r Pierce Crosby, one "if the "id (st naval ofllcers i:i the nVct. and ev ?ry man on the boat was liisirwti-1 s to what he was to do under givn cir !u:nslaiii'cs. We carried on the Pi:iol-i til Infernal machine or tori-.. t!i" Invention of a Frenchman mi l-iard, with w hich we hoped to demolish one f the hulks supporllna the chain. 'I h:s :hain, by the way. was one of the largest ship cable kind. It was se cured on the south side of the river in ! lie woods below Fort Jackson and car ried across the river to the north side. Dear Fort St. Philip, where it was hove Unit by a crab winch. It was supported by four hulks so as to sus tain the chain at the reijuirisl ib-pth Vlow the water surface. "It was dark as dark could lw and fie of the Puiola ran alongside the mid dle hulk, ami, there being no guards in board, we made our Infernal ma rhlne secure under the chain and at tached the electric wire. Two men earricil the wire to the station near the battery on the gunlsiat, so as to be ready ns soon as we were far enough way to make connection with the bat tery and blow up the hulk. However. !he water was unusually high, the cur rent was very strong, ami our boat was swept astern so fast that before we could regain headway the wire snapped off short near the reel. "This caused excitement and eotifti ion on board the I'inola, the noise was heard at the fort und the guns opened tm us In a way to send us off In a hur ry. Meantime the Itasca bad been to the north of us examining the channel. mid after slipping the chain from one of the hulks had run nground under the guns of Fort St. Philip. Just as we were turning down stream the oifl- rer commanding the Itasca came along side in a small Unit, reported that his ship was aground close in shore under St Philip, and asked If he shoul.l abandon the vessel and blow her up. as the rebel as soon as II became light enough to see would destroy her. Cros by replied, "No. and directed Uie otllcer to go back to his ship, saying that the I'inola would take the Itasca's hawser and try to pull her off. "Thereupon the I'inola ran over In the darkness tit the Itasca, where there was a great confusion. We got our hawser out, conveyed It to the Itasca, secured It, and all being ready steamed ahead with n swing to port for the center of the river to get more power. But the hawser parted, ami before we could haul In the piece on our wide It sunk under the propeller well ami was caught up and wound around the shc.ft so tightly that It stopped the engines. Here was a crisis which, like that at Resaca, had to be met at ouce, or both Iwats would be lost. The forU were already firing at us, and the moon was coming up. "Crosby ami the other officers and the men worked like heavers. A hawser was bent to the kedge anchor and let go to hold the Pinnla's head up stream, and Lieutenant Cook asked for a vol unteer to go down the propeller well with an ax and cut the hawser from the shaft The carpenter's mate, Ed ward Spencer, of Baltimore, aahl he would try It. A rope was fastened around his body and a life line to his left arm, and down he went Into the well, I looking after the life line. Spencer dived Uirough six feet of wa ter, and standing ou the propeller shaft tried to cut tbe hawser, which, of course, he could not see. He came tip twice to blow, but succeeded the third time In cutting the hawser, and lucky for him and all of us that he did cut It. "Just as he struck Uie last lick and came up the eddy current struck the gunboat on the starboard how, causing her to sheer to port and the full strain coining on the hawser. It parted and we drifted broadside down st renin. Just at that moment the propeller was cleared, the engines were started, and all was safe. We gave the Itasca an other hawser and the first pull with her engines working with ours brought her off and we proceeded down stream under h full bead of steam just ns the moon rose, "By his daring and bravery Spencer saved tbe two gunboats and the lives of thoae on board. If the hawser to tbe hedge anchor had been In tbe port hs )i,pe when the eurr-n. in the eddy truck the U.w of the Fim.U she . er thinly would have gone ashore, as ! bad no use of her engines at the tin. If SpetK-er had been cotnjUl "' ' down a fourth time be ouid )'vs (been crushed to death by the h:fwu ' of the boat when the hawser parted. Thlcsgo Inter Ocean. Taken for a Ppr. ! There Is living In Gasper Comity. I Neb., a lady who did an unintentional ! servl'ee to the i nhm army at a .r ti- al time by looking much like Pauline Cushman, the spy, as she could. The lady is an own cousin of Jeff DavU first wife, was raised in the South, grew up uisJer the baneful influence of slavery, and has tl-dtcd with le-r !avi-lealiiig relatives every centra i slave market of the South, one cm-d not ex- t loyalty to grow from sii.-h conditions. A young fellow from Wisconsin went South as a teacher and was engage! In or near St. Iju1s to teach a ulere of hers. She had revolted agsin-t slavery and was looking for a way out of the land of her kinsfolk. In three w .-eks after meeting her nle -e Northern Instructor she took advan tage of an opsirttiiie moment a dark night, I think she told uie and elopel with him to a be'ler pla e Wi-consin. War was then a foregone conclusion, and the call for troops was sin an-i.oiiiic.-d. The private tutor enlisted in the Twentieth Wisconsin ami was ll the lia'tle at Prairie Grove. Ark , or near there, at the time. Ills yoiin Southern wife could get no tidings of him after the buttle, and started fr"W Jefferson ('.unity, Wis., to find him. She was taken s"eson of III !f. Spoils by nlrf-1 nltkvrs. taken to :!i hoii-e of one or them, and searched lor a dl-pat'-h they ;:p!-ed she had. They cut !.:T clonk ! piece, str pp l I, new bat Into scan-less shreds, t'"'k her piu-e ami Its contents, but gen-eroil-ly forgot to take the change of a .. bill that was loe In her drcs-l pocket. Searched the remainder of ber clothing In an unbecoming man ner (even for war lijaesi, then told her If she had any prayers to make slid must make thetn pretty iiilck. Slia asked to be taken to relatives In thl city l rebel oilbersi to be Id- nMled. They comp'hd. and the relatives ac knowledged that she was the p -rson she claimed to be, but would hnvo nothing more to do with her. PauMn Cubiilan. the famous spy. bad hap pened to seeVJu-r on the train, and tbo physical resemblance was so striklmf that she assumed the dress of l-r tat that tiir.ei unfortunate rival, and went Isildly out of St. I.oiils the next day in another iisiimcd dress of hep rival's, mill no rebel dated to int.-rferi with her lest the niltnke of the day pivveHi lc rc,,c.i!ci!, and that "dis patch" went on Its merciful mission t a Fiiioii general. Two days after her St. Ixiuls experi ence she ii.it ruuiy oi iijicd a treatment to tar ami feathers by the timely ,-p. l-eurniii-e of a I nioii soldier doinsr guard duty at Pacific I'lty. twenty Iku miles from St. Iuls. Hie had gonn there to visit her tin thcr. The $." In change Is-lng nil the money the chiv alry" left In ber posessslon. her search; for a t'nlon husband was abruptly ended. She was writing a letter to him when a llttlo knot of Missouri bushwhackers rushed Into the hotis with their tar kettle, and the Fnioii guard Htatiotiisl four or five inilcs dis tant rushed In on the noble Missouri tins. His miiiie was (ihost. He had a slight acquaintance with a young-r sister of the liuly, and supposed slm was the one the bushwhackers w.-ro after. He would have gone to the de fense anyhow. It was one Instance of the war where "one Southern geutl h man didn't lick twenty Yanks." Does anyone rememlier the circumstance or the man? Having renounced the Southern faith, her relatives refused to prnte.-t her, and hr money being gone, sha could neither follow her husband nor return to his Northern home, so shu went to work at that which came near est for the I'nion cause, tn hospital or anywhere that she could do at all, and did not see her husband until the war was over. On e when In camp at New Orleans he started like n hap py whirlwind to meet bis wife. Im agine his disappointment. It wai Pauline Cushman riding Into camp with an important dispatch, for the commanding general. The lira nd Army has no truer friend than the Southern wife of the Twen tieth Wisconsin soldier, the physical counterpart of the famous spy of tb I'nion army, n Southern woman her self. American Tribune. Expounding the Constitution. In lHt.l two Ixiys who had been friends at school went to their home for their summer vacation, a year later one of them, swinging ulmig with his battalion, ttph-d the other ns a meid. bef of another Imdy of miMI-th. Ilia greeting was of 1he familiar type, oti sislng of, "Hello! John, u lint' ore you doing down here':" Quick tin a flash came the response: "Ob, Just down here helping to expound tbe Constitu tion." i And so It was. Statesmen had de. tinted the question for three-quartcra of a century; lawyers had argued tha subject, and Judges had made coi tllet ng rulings regarding It But these two schoollwiys and their comrade wet to define Its meonlnif so that all tha world should understand It The oil from the germ of a kernel of com is worth 5 cents a niud, while, the sUrch with which the kernel la filled Is worth but 1V4 cents pound. The muscle forming protein Is In tba bull. Nothing la so hard, but ooarrh will And It out Derrick.