THE COURIER fir l i j a Bb is1 L ? . iP , . If-. IIS'' Pt I? " i Kfe -' Pr i t r Sir C'' t fc ONE OP TIJE NORTH MEN KATHARINE MKLICK. (For Tho Courier.) VII college walls thit dissolved before him into the picture of a strangely old baby face, blue-lipped, with a forehead lined by pain. "How is the baby, mother?" he whis pered to Eliza, at the door, and Eliza abook her crown of close drawn braids, threaded now with grey. "When Adah can get her term's wages, and we have a cow," she began, It was when the grasshoppers came "Father MatthiaEoa," as the Reverend James had come to be known along the lower I'latte country, was preaching in a Eod school houeo, when the air dark- but the boy's face stopped her, and they ened with the plague shadow. It is looked together at the quivering field of told, to this day, how ho lifted his wheat. hands to cry out against the iniquities There would be nothing, now, to keep of which the visible punishment was a cow The "little twin" might go on falling, and how he held every soul of getting copies with her slim fingers, but the anxious congregation for an hour, i,er eacnfice would not avail, listening to the tale of their sins, while With 6ome glimpBe of his mother's the grasshoppers ate up their grain. j0Dfr vigil of years, waiting for what Then he strode ten miles to his next m;ght come, burdened with littlo ones' appointment, with the whirring swarms neede, John touched very gently the rising up before him and dropping back to their work behind with a sound like myriads of imp reapers, sawing the stalks with infinitese'imal sytheB. Sometimes pitchy smoke rolled over a field, from fires pet to fight back the invaders. LoDg trenches had been dug along many green acres, but though mute, strong fingers that had dropped helpless. "Mother, I can't help you, here. There's no work, nothing but to eat your bread. I'm going away, back to Canada. I'm going to study, and ba something for yoo. One less will be some help to a preacher's family." frequently these were filled with squirm- Then they both looked inward at the ing maeses, there seemed no thinning little crib. of the invading hosts ahead. Amid the smells of pitchy smoke, burning rags, and stranger odors from the smeared trenches, the old man walked, with the spirit of contest rising in his veins. "No. I didn't mean that. But you know." Tet John waited, unt't' the little life that dickered more and more faint at last went out with the first snows of the "It is the voice of the Lord God unto faniineyear. Then help came from the jour Pharaoh, which is Mammon, 'Let Bjj;eg With the October frost, upon my people go!' "waB the burden of his the ravaged fields had fallen benedic preaching that night in a 'lean to' which tion from unknown hands. It was the rustled with the devouring wave reach- Reverend John Matthiason himself who ing its thatch of morning glory vines. dispensed with impartial hands the gar- "Toyouallinlhis broad inheritance, ments and food that railroads carried the green and gold of harvest have been but the gold and green of eagles and bank notes. This is God's scourge upon Mammon. 'Let my people go!' All must suffer as all have been blessed. And all must repent before it is ever- free from the east, that had not forgot ten. Old homesteads by the Delaware the Ohio and the Illinois, opened their granaries and cedar chests. Fingers that trembled with age stowed red ap ples among the strong folds of winter months eat up the fruit of your hands, so the myriad seconds of earthly life are consuming your probation here. And if this destruction pains you, reflect upon the pains of that eternal devour ing of the worm which dieth not. 'Lis- lastingly too late. Even as the myriad coats ana ;n the generous palms of furry mittens. Fingers that trembled with want opened the stores, and divided them with earnest care. On the edge of the shivering crowd that assembled in the sod school house where the boxes "from the east" were ten, then.' and in the pause the vine opened, John waited. "See if the rest stalks fell from the eaves,' listen, before Deed it more- hia mother had charged jour day of consuming vengeance come, him, and he waited, with his eyes on and you gather up your feet in death, his father's hand. "Seems like hear the voice that cries unto Mammon, mother needs every one of 'em," he 'Let my people go!' " thought, hungrily, as canned fruit, dried In the days of gathering want that c,rDi cheeses and jelly went to the sad- followed, while whiter faces and gloom- faced joung fathers of sick little ones, ier eyes turned upon the Jeremiahs of Then a pair of blankets, the great prize, the veteran 'preacher,' there was no waB divided, but Father Matthiason softening of the "message." James refused a suggestion that the 'preach- MatthiaBon as little thought of sparing er'e wife' needed one of these. He the hearts of his flock as of sparing the tlesh of his children, and not one small Matthiason but hushed laugher when his travel-worn figure darkened his own door. Men have conquered empires with no more of fixed purpose, and be was supreme in his own. There were twelve Matthiasons when the plague came, and John and James, on borrowed horses, galloped up and down the little wheat field they had planted, dragging a long rope over the heads of grain. A cloud of swarming steadily dealt the precious gifts until his helpers declared that every sufferer had received some good thing. Then John, half in shame, pushed to the emptied cases. His father determinedly looked away, while the boy took a little muslin folded thing from the last box. A woman standing near to help, nodded. "That aint what you'd ought to have but if jour mother can use it, take it along. How's the baby?'1 "Dead," John whispered, and hurried home to Eliza. 'You aint got to cut any more of your Hero's what father green and brown rose before the drag gine rope, and fell again behind it, with ciothes, mother, livelier gusto upon the milky grams. saved.'' "There goes Bchoolin', down them So they buried the twelfth and last of crunchin'jawB."John muttered, sullen- the children of Eliza, in the little gown ly, flinging off from his wet horse and fashioned by stranger fingers, turning his eyes away from the little field. But everywhere the wriggling plain seemed to quiver into nauseous life, until the boy threw his head up ward, and took one long look at the unspotted light of the summer sky. Then he walked home to his mother scarcely conscious that James "tricky Jim," bad hastily, stampeded both horses, and was eff for a half day of rare "fun" with a livelier comrade. It was a vanishing glimpse of books and "If ten men should ask you to marry them, what would it be?" "What would it be?" "A tender." "And if one should ask you, what would that be?" "I don't know; what?" "A wonder." From Life. A Hi BIBHBE Is That of the British Doctors at the Cor. Hth and N Streets, Sheldon Block. These Eminent Gentlemen are Giving Their Services Free for Three Months to All Invalids Who Call Up on Them Before Oct JOth. A staff of eminent physicians and surgeons from the British Medical In stitute, at the urgent solicitation of a large number of patients under their care in this country, have established a permanent branch of the Institute in this city, at the office, corner of Eleventh and N streets, in the Sheldon b'ock These eminent gentlemen have de cided to give their services entirely tree for three months medicines excepted) to all invalids who call upon them for treatment between now and Oct. 10th. These services will not only consist of consultation, examination and advice, but also of all minor surgical operations. The object in pursuing this course is to become rapidly and personally ac quainted with the sick and afflicted, and under no condition will any charge what ever be made for any services rendered for three months to all who call before Oct. 10th. The doctors treat all forms of disease and deformities, and guarantee- a cure in every case they undertake. At the first interview a thorough examination is made; and, if incurable, you are frank ly and kindly told so; also advised against spending your money for use less treatment. Male and female weakness, catarrh and catarrhal deafness, also rupture, goitre, cancer, all skin diseases .and all diseases of the rectum are positively cured by their new treatment. The chief associate surgeon of the Institute, assisted by one or more of his staff associates, is in personal charge. Office hours from 9 a. m. till 8 p. m. No Sunday hours. Special Notice If you cannot call send stamp for question blank for home treatment. COUNTER-THOUGHTS , "What is the baby thinking about . Very wonderful things, no doubt ." What are the old folks thinking about ? Very wonderful things, no doubt . A thought like this filled the baby's head (A wonderful baby, and very well read . He gazed at grandpa, and grandma, too , And mirrored the pair in his eyes of blue As side by side they sat there, rocking He with his pipe, and she with her stocking And the baby wondered, as well he might , Why the old folks always were happy and bright; And he said in his heart with a blithe little start That showed how gladly he'd act his part : "111 find some baby, as soon as I can , To stay with me till I'm grown an old man And, side by side, well sit there, rocking I with my pipe, and she with her stocking." Mary Mapes Dodge, in September St. Nicholas. A. Special Discount on. Until October 1st. 215 So. Uth 215 So. JJth .o-ooo oocxexos cnocs-oo-oo-oo-ocxi IINCOIN HARDWARE CO. I2IO O Street. 1 If, TENNIS, FOOTBALL, ATHLETIC SUPPLIES SPII tl2rJll2rM2ra2rM2?M TflE MH MMH) the times is the business man who doesn't use a typewriter in his correspondence. II TYPEWRITER repays its cost quickly and re peatedly by increasing- the fa cility for conducting" business. We handle several standard machines; in fact, every good sort of Tvoewriter. and will be glad to show them to you. I TYPEWRITER S 1 y. II06 O Street . . . Telephone 759 Letters from Abroad. . There is no better way of keeping posted in detail on the progress of the world outside of the United States than by watching the "Foreign News Notes ' published in the Chicago Record-Herald. Over a hundred foreign staff correspond ents of The Chicago Record Herald are located in important cities abroad. Their duties do not end with the trans mission of news by cable, but includo also correspondence by mail concerning all important matters of any interest to readers in this country. It is worthy of note, also, that in addition to the work of its own correspondents The Record-Herald receives the full foreign newB service of the New York Herald, the New York Tribune and the Associ ated Press. Y r ifc.-ri