:3m m f-;V • •i • ' ' fibs «l f̂i4iî iMrî 4lt Um winds sad lushed . And tiS^8pwl^^S®pies tore the MNpbef the ships that were Of tlM ships that were tossing homs Hi tt* Uiil and billowy 4«em Bat who shall reach to tbs wrecks, the wrecks, •; :/ where ths ships and their captains sleep? ' :V" vm~,. . ^ Oh, wrecks by the black seas •'v In the desolate ocean nights! v <• . Lost, lost in the darknecsl Lost - w In sight o' the harbor lightsl ' The sky made a veil o' the clouds and aaooorg* o'the lightning fed. • And the blasts bowefl the masts of the Bhipthat Cared whefe lore and the sea gulls led; Of the ships that were flaring home with love fbff the ^raiting breast, Bnt wh«e Is the love that can reach to the , wrecks where the ships and their cap- -fains rest? v>* W0r•' Oh, ships of our love, ware tossed, - kr In the fathomless ocean nights! [fn Lost, lost in the blackness! Lost In sight o' the harbor lights! THE TABLES TURNED "A thtrn dude!" snorted Joe Daizey contemptuously. That was the general verdict from 0 all the boys when Phil Ames made his K ; 2 appearance among them at Middleton's ^ ' ranch. Delia Middleton had returned home * from the city, and Phil had come with her to the ranch, where her father wel comed him as the son of one of his friends and companions of other days. w xC It was soon whispered also that Phil I ' " was a suitor for Delia's hand, and that |:.'*£-• alone was sufficient for him to be watch- I, */1' «d closely and criticised by the coW- jy boys, who, every one of them, were , . ready to swear by and to do anything > V"5, in their power to please the queen of i i * the ranch. Miss Delia Middleton. '/j-{ Phil Ames, at a first glance, looked ' "/ -rather effeminate, but upon closer ob- . servation he proved to be quite other wise. There was not a surplus ounce of flesh about him anywhere, and his | ̂ , frame was well knit and strong. More- rjtj. over, Phil was a pleasant, easy going Ef; " fellow whom nothing seemed to disturb, | - and whose temper was the sunniest in 1 / the world. iiy ; Therefore a couple of weeks at the ranch was sufficient for Phil to gain • the good will of everybody around the f'\:? place. Even Joe Dalzey, the most crit ic ,, t ical among them all, had to admit that V. he was not half so bad as he looked and **7 ' might improve into a right good fel- 1 tl'% low if he staid at the ranch long enough. In the rough play among the cowboys J.; i Phil held his own easily and often turn- ed their rude jokes so that they lost i their sting, or fastened the laugh on xY him who had expected to see Phil made ridiculous. jgr~j Joe Dalzey considered himself the ff , leader among the boys on the ranch, - and they seldom ventured to differ with , • him in his opinions, which he never gj , failed to express with all the decision V ftnd emphasis he could master. *L One evening after Phil had been at the ranch nearly a month Mr. Middle- a ton came into the house where he and Ss,^ Delia were together. ' "I have to send a squad of the boys over to Bald prairie tomorrow, and I ; don't know where in thunder%'m going ! i- 7~~ to find a cook to go with them," he ^ ( said. $$^4' "What is.the "• *ter with Edmunds, asked ]>ua. ' "He is down wiiit the chills, and that puts him out of the question. There is ^4,5^ Andrews, too, gone off to town and won't be back for a week,** said Mr. Middleton. "Can't you get one of the others to cook?" asked Delia. 5 -v a I "Why, there isn't one of them can biscuit that wouldn't choke a dog." "Suppose you send Dinah and my- - self with them ? We could manage, I reckon," said Delia, laughing. "h' "But what would become of us who ^ \ have to stay at home?" "Do your own cooking or starve," r pjjajg laughed Delia. 'V- "I'm afraid it would be the latter - most of the time," said Mr. Middleton. "No, I've cooked for a camping outfit before now, and if the worst coraes to K„ $•* the worst I can do it again, only I can hardly spare the time." > j .; "I'll go and cook for them, Mr. Mid- -* V , dleton," said Phil. "I suppose it is . yy' only coffee, bacon, biscuits and a batch' of cornbread occasionally." "You cook!" exclaimed Mr. Middle- ton. "Why, my boy, they'd mob you at the first meal." "Why do you think so?" I-' "Your cookery would drive them to it. They would have to do it in self a defense, you know--kill you or starve 2 to death themselves." 1 "They would have to do neither, I protested Phil, laughing. "I am a better cook than you think. I 4,^ hope you have not forgotten that I staid in the mountains of Colorado nearly the whole of last year? I did the most of the cooking for the three of us there, f, . and, if I say it myself, there was no one ever turned up his nose at what I placed on the table." ** For awhile there was a lively discus- eioo about Phil going as cook with the *? cowboys, but he finally gained the con- ^ sent from both Mr. Middleton and Del- jUtf la, and it was decided that he could § go, provided he would not blame them if*anything went wrong. The next Fi; day therefore he drove away in the fev- wagon containing the raw materials on ft* which he was to display his art as a J first class cook for a cowboy camp. 1" "If Phil comes out on top in this es- ^ ' !VrTlj i There was once a ship of my sonl thAt tossed - o'er a stormy sea, 1,^;; ,. And this was my grayer, when the nights gloomed droar: "Send my soul's shipBafe tome! f f ' Send my soul's ship safely home from billows '* and blackened skies!** But where is the soul that can reach to the depth, the depths where my soul's ship •' 0 '• t)h. ship of my soul, storm tosssd, " In the far and the fearful nirhtrf "r" ' -Lost, lost, in the blackness! lost i In sfght o' the harbor lights! - -Hhffik L. Stanton in Atlanta Constitution. | , assure you,' I . look- "X shall have no objection as a son-in-law." 'H do it, papa," Mild J>eIlA» blushing prettily. The cowboys had struck camp and pitched their tents at the first branding pen. They had eaten the first supper Plitl had cooked for them, and they had en joyed it, praising it iu unequivocal terms. Ana of the boys had occasion to go to Che wagon for something after supper and saw something white, neatly fold ed, lying to one side. He picked it up to see what it was and foand it to be a white shirt with a highly glossed front. "A boiled shirt I" he exclaimed. For a moment he hesitated, then he rolled the shirt up carefully and took it to where his companions where sitting or lounging around their tent. There was a whispered consultation. "Some of you kindle a fire," said Dalzey. "I'll get the branding irons. A couple of you fellows had better go over to where Phil is busy and keep him there as long as you can." The fire was kindled. The branding irons were put into the fire, and when they were sufficiently heated the boys went to work and "ran" every brand they knew upon the white shirt spread out upon the ground before them. There were numbers and letters and combinations of both. There were the "rail fence," the "bull's head," the "antlers" and the "jug." There were circles and semicircles, bars and double bars, with all their variations, and lines straight and crooked in every possible position and curve. Altogether it was an artistic piece of work, covering every inch from hem to neckband and outward to both ends of the sleeves. The next morning when Phil got up before daylight to prepare breakfast he found the shirt spread out, fastened to the hind end of the wagon. He looked it over carefully and smiled. She is dressed, like the early ipriim In the daintiest pink and white; nem her mischievous hand she flings Pink petaled lawn daisies, the sprite. The daisies are spells, and after She's cast them and knows that I'm bound, . ' The ring of her delicate lauphter Creaks into bright ripples of sound. So now I'm her poor captive knight, Unable to cope with her art; f Henceforth, with her baby feet light, She will walk roughshod o'er my heart. --London Spectator. WIND'S GIFT. A boisterous fellow indeed is North Wind, but he is not always as rough as he is known to be on some occasions. He may be as gentle as a slumbering babe in its cradle, he may bewitch all living things with the tones of his lyre, or he may burst with the might of an all powerful giant upon the world of men. That was a mischievous prank he played in days of yore on a boy in Norseland and whom we will call Olaf. Pay heed and you shall learn about it. Olaf was the only son of a widow, and she was both i^eble and poor. She had taught the boy to wait on h%r, and this made him kind and thoughtful. One day she sent him for some flour to the storehouse. This was a frame building, raised from' the ground on wooden props, and had to be reached by a flight of stairs. Olaf ran lightly up the steps, got the flour and was turn ing to hasten down again when North Wind came puffing and panting that way, caught up the floor and bore it off through the air. Olaf went back for more flour, but the moment he set foot on the stairs North Wind snorted and sniffed about him, and, pips I away went the flour. If you'll believe me, the same thing hap pened a third time, and now Olaf was a .... "I forgot to put it back in the valise positively angry, for it seemed quit yesterday evening." he mused to him- too provoking that North Wind shoui self as he was hurrying with his work "I was somewhat surprised when I found it among the other clothes, but in the hurry of packing it must have slipped in somehow accidentally." During the time he was cooking breakfast he chuckled to himself fre quently. and once or twice laughed out loud as he thought of the plan he was forming to pay the boys back in the same coin they had given him. From day to day pieces were cut from the branded shirt, which Phil had left hanging to the end of the wagon where he had found it. The boys watched the pieces disappear, until on the even ing before they were ready to break up camp and return home there was noth ing left of it but the seams and wrist bands. •' What's become ot your boiled shirt, Phil?" one of them ajsked. Phil looked around and viewed the remains of it. "It looks like somebody has been eat ing it," he said laughingly. "At any rate, there are only the tough parts of it left." That was all they could get out of him just then. They returned to the ranch the next day, and the boys, with one voice, praised Phil's cooking very highly to Mr. Middleton. "Bulliest cook we ever had," cried Dalzey. "And he takes a joke like a man," put in another. Then they told Mr. Middleton and Delia, who had just joined them, how they had treated Phil's white shirt, and how he had apparently enjoyed the joke as much as any of them. vLet us have a look at it," cried Delia, laughing and clapping her hands. Phil went to the wagon and held up before them what remained of the shirt. 4' But what became of the rest of it?" Delia asked. "I fed it to the boys," replied Phil, laughing now. "They thought they didn't like boiled shirt, but I noticed that they devoured a good piece of it every day. Every morning I cut off a good slice, chopped it up fine, fried it, browned it, scorched it and ground it up and put it into everything I set be fore them. You have their own words for it that they liked my cookery--boil ed shirt a la Phil Ames." For a moment there.were some low ering brows, but when Dalzey stepped forward and gave his hand to Phil the clouds vanished. "Phil," he said, "you're a brick! Hope you will stay at the ranch always, and when the day comes, dura my pic ture if I don't wear a boiled shirt and dance at the wedding." Delia and Phil looked at each other and blushed, and Mr. Middleton laugh ed heartily.--John P. Sjolander. m jlljsllffc .•llrL: 8now In Switzerland. . of the mountain railroads'In Switzerland find it advantageous to open long before the snow melts on their upper parts, and to do this an enormous amount of snow has to be shoveled away. One May, when the road from Glion, on Lake Geneva, up to Rocher de Naye was opened, 'the cars ran for some distance between walls of solid compressed snow 12 to 20 feet high. When the work began, one of the up per stations had disappeared, and it was supposed that it had been swept away by the winter storms. A rounded ele vation w«.s recognized as the site of a water tank, and from this the position of the station was determined, and ex cavations were begun. After digging down six feet the shovelers struck not the foundation, but the roof of the sta tion, wjiich was in its place intaofc The Origin of Tariff. * - '* Tariff was originally the name of a Moorish chief, who, having a port in Spain, near Gibraltar, was accustomed to levy toll on passing vessels. His toll became a regularly understood thing, and the amount Was added to the price of tl>e goods. lAJ id act in such a senseless fashion. So Olaf made up his mind that he would go in search of the thief and demand back the flour. He set out it once, but he walked many a long, weary mile before he came at last to North Wind's home. North Wind had quieted down and was in a most gracious mood when Olaf presented himself before him. "Good day, " said Olaf. "I hope you are well. Mr. North Wind." ' * The same to yourself, my boy," said | North Wind, and his voice was gruff, but not unkind. "What brings yon here, if I may ask?" "I've come," said Olaf, "to aeeif you'll be so kind as to give me back the flour you took from me on the store house stairs. Mother and I are poor, and if we lose the little we have we'll starve to death." "I haven't your flour,'* said North Wind, "but since you're so badly off here's a tablecloth for you. It will sup ply you with all you want to eat and drink if you but say, 'My cloth, spread yourself and serve np all sorts of good things.' " Thanking North" Wind with all his heart. Olaf took the cloth and started for home. As the way was so long, he couldn't hope to get back to his mother that night, so he stopped at a wayside inn to rest until morning. When the people at the inn began to prepare the evening meal, Olaf thought he would surprise theiu. So he threw his cloth on a table in the corner, say ing: "My cloth, spread yourself and serve np all sorts of good things." Scarcely had he spoken before the cloth did as it was bid, and every one in the room was filled with wonder. There was no one better pleased than the landlady, for she thought how fnuch hard work and trouble it would save her if she had such a cloth. She spoke with her husband about it, and in the middle of the night he stole into Olaf's chamber and changed the cloth for one his wife had given him that looked like it. When Olaf woke the next morning, rested and refreshed, he set out at once for home, taking with him the wrong cloth. He got there safely the same day and ran to his mother, crying: "Well, I've been to see North Wind, and he's not so bad, after all. Here is a tablecloth he gave me, and it is of the kind that if I just say the word it will furnish us with all we need to eat and drink." "I'll have to see that with my own eyes before I can believe it," said his mother. Olaf laid the cloth on a table, and with the air of one who knew what he was about said: "My cloth, spread yourself and serve np all sorts of good things." But never so much as a crumb of dry bread did the cloth serve. "There's no help for it," said Olaf. "I'll have to go back to North Wind and ask him the meaning of this." Away he went so fast that he reached North Wind's home that same after noon. "Good evening, Mr. North Wind," said Olaf. "Good evening, my boy,"feaid North • Wind. "What now?" "I want my rights for the flour you took. That tableloth is good for noth ing." "Well, here is a ram," said North Wind, "that will furnish you with all the gold coins you want. All you have to do is to say,'My ram, make money.' " Olaf thought this was pretty nice, and he went off feeling well content. If he had gone straight home, he would have had no further trouble, but feel ing tired he stopped at the wayside inn to rest for the night. Before he gave his orders he thought he would try his ram, and sure enough he soon had a handful of pure gold coins. The landlord saw this and thought he would like to own eo valuable a beast. When Olaf was fast asleep, he •nd left it there In the lie coveted. "North Wind is a pretty good fel low. " said Olaf when he got home to hiB mother. "Here's a ram he has giv en me that will make all the money we want, if I but say the word." "It will take a great deal to make me believe such stuff, *' exclaimed Olaf's mother. "My ram, make money," cried Olaf promptly, but never a coin did the ram ! bring forth. "I knew it was all nonsense," wailed die widow, and that was all the com fort Olaf got. Without another word he sped back toNorth Wind and told him the ram had proved absolutely worthless. He had come now to demand his rights, he said. * "Upon my word, you'red a plucky lad," exclaimed North Wind. "Well, the best I can do for you now is to give you the stick in yonder corner. It may be of some use to you. If you say. ' My stick, do your duty,'it will go on strik ing until you say. 'My stick, be still." With many thanks Olaf started for home. As he passed the inn where he had lost his treasures, he thought it might not be a bad thing to stop there once more. So he wont in, threw him self down on a bench and was soon snoring loudly. The landlord quickly spied the magic stick, and taking it for granted it might be worth as much to him as the cloth and ram he had taken from the same guest he found another stick that looked like it to leave in its place. But as he laid hands on North Wind's gift, Olaf, who was only pretending to be asleep, started v. p, crying: "My stick, do your duty." Then the stick fell to beating the landlord, who tumbled headlong over benches and tables, shrieking and screaming: "For mercy's sake, bid this stick be F'ill. or it will beat me to death. Stop it --for pity's sake stop it,and I'll give vou back your tablecloth and yonr lam." As soon as Olaf thought mine hoot had been well punished he said quietly: "My stick, be still." At once the magic stick ceased from its labors, and the landlord restored the stolen goods to their rightful owner. Olaf put the tablecloth and the stick in his pocket, and fastening h cord to the ram's horns led it home in triumph. North Wind had paid handsomely for the flour, and the widow and her son lived in peace and plenty all their days.--Auber For res tier in Philadel phia Press. i McHEttftV f ip?u VQUR BBCAD CAN'T BE SOUR r--7 -- IF YOU USK - GILLETT'S E t MAGIC H Miller & Son DKAUKKS IN-- YE i PURE QUCCft •CON ON! MAL Aak for "-Mutti*?* pt. yotir Grocer's. Lethltt* leu toia o«/ter kiuiis to other people. WEVER GETS i SOUR. MARBLE & GHAHITf K'Oimnnentta. llend»>toi>ei TABLETAJ ETC. 'Vmeterv Work «>t everv cle» Y Hprintion nwlv executed *1 th# Sstis&eUoa OstrasiMd. : at McHeOry and Johns- ' bur^h, III, whure at all timet c a n h e J o n n d a a m e n . % of fininheri work ^-5 H^nry & **fn§. •URBONST FORE RYE Shipped pure and unadulter ated direct from the distillery. Pronounced a pure and whole some tonic-stimulant by the medical fraternity everywhere. Gives life, strength and happi ness to the weak, sick, aged and infirm. If you osnnot proeuze it of your drncgist at liquor dealers, upon receipt of tLBO we will express prepaid to any address a full Quart sample bottle of Old Elk Rye or Bourbon. STOU. (MMTTAI CO.. DtSTtUii^ Lexington, K|> Htfa 1M S3 SHOE Do jm wear them 7 Wlws next h mi bf t prihjS iMt In the worML DR. FRTJTHi --WILL B»-- ' • AT WOODSTC CK. ILL., Friday, Dec. 18. 1803. s ( Office Hours from 9 •. m. to 5 . . .xyjStkMntn. wooDSTdcm • \ A Now Building Material. | A new kind of building material as a proposed substitute for ordinary stone or brick is now receiving special in dorsement on account of its freedom, . under various and repeated tests, from ; the usual liability to crack or fracture. , To insure this property, with the other essential adaptations, silicic acid is used, powdered and cleansed from all impurities. Five to ten per cent of this is mixed in warm river or rainwater, and this is applied to slaked' or well ; burned lime, or added to hydraulic lime, the resulting product being mixed with , aand and small portions of fluorspar. This mixture is cast into molds, in various shapes as may be desired, and after removal the castings are left 1* _ f . ,t- . -L u., dry from 12 to 24 hours, which bring^J r®*eS»' tickets good for re- them to a condition as dry as atmoij-sJJ®^?®^®,^8, 1894, in- pheric air. In this state they are brougljju to into a steam boiler and steam blown*" ' through so as to drive out all air, after which the boiler is hermetically sealed np and steam let in under a pressure of 10 atmospheres. In this high pres sure steam bath the stones remain for 48 to 72 hours, afterward being submit ted to a bath of boiling and sal arated chloride of calcium for 6 to 12 hours, also under a pressure of about 10 at mospheres, in the same boiler, and the condensed water may be used for the bath. The stones are allowed to dry in the open air, or, more quickly, by circulating steam inside the boiler after the chloride of calcium has been with drawn and prior to taking ont the stones., --New York Sun. The Coldest Cold. The science of chemistry, like that of geography, has its undiscovered north pole. Four hundred and sixty-one de grees below the freezing point of the Fahrenheit thermometer (--274 degree C.)„lies a mysterious, specially indi cated degree of cold which science has long been gazing toward and striving to attain, wondering meanwhile what may be the conditions of matter at this unexplored point. Its existence has long been indicated and its position es tablished in two different ways--viz, the regularly diminishing volume of gases and the steady falling off of the resistance made by pure metals to the passage through them of electricity un der increasing degrees of cold. This point, to which both these proc esses tend as an ultimate, is called the aero of absolute temperature. By more ! than one eminent observer it is supposed to be the temperature of interstellar space, the normal temperature of the universe. Whether or not this suppo sition be correct, the efforts which have been made and are still in progress to reach this degree of cold have been many, diverse and ingenious, the equipment of the explorer being not boats, condensed foods and the general machinery of ice exploration, but all the varied resources of mechanics and of chemistry which can be combined to compass the ex- tremest degree co^--JMcClure's DR. D. O. FRUTH, Prepared Physician--John, just loosen up those scales a bit; I expect that patient whom I promised an increase in weight of 50 pounds. John--Yes, sir. Physician--And, John, after he has gone tighten them up again. That fat man who wants to lose some of his flesh may be in some time during the Late /ktrgeon m the Provident Medical Dl*ptn. taryo/ Sew York now Pretidml qf iht FHUh Mtdical In*Mule, chartered His long experience in the largest hospitals In the worm enables him to treat all Ghbohtc NfKVous, SKIM AN1> BlojD diseases upon the latest scientific principles. DK FRliTH has no superior In diagnosing and troatlrg diseases and deformities. He will give tSO for any case he csnnot tell the disease an<t where located In tlve minute Medical and surgical diseases, scu e and chronic. CstHrrab, diseases of the Eye, Kar Nose, Th'<mtand Lungs, Dyspepsia, Rrteht's Disease, Diabetes, Kidney, Liver. Bladder, Chronic Female and Sexual Diseases e|:eerti!y c red by treatment that h»s never <ailed ih thousands of cases tLatt ad been prohouneed beyond hope. Many people meet death every year who miffht have been restored to perfect health bad they placed their oases in tho hands of experts. DR. FRUTH has attained the most wonder ful success in the treatment of cases to which he devotes special attenti n, and after yenr» of experience, i as perfected tlie most infalli hie inetlTd of curingOrpanic Weakness, Ner vous Debility, Premature Decline of the Man- (y Power. Involuntary Vital Losses, Impair ed Memory. Mental Anxiety. Absence of Will Power, Melancholy, Weak Back and kidney cffe«*tioP8 if consulted before Idiocy, Jnaanitv Kallinir Fits or Total Tin potency result from YOU Tilt U L ERROKS, the awful effect vrhich blight the most radiant hopen, unir itig pati em tor business study, society or marriage, t n sweeping to an untimely grave* thousand of voun* men <-f ex^lt'il talent and brilliant Intellect. PILES CURED with out pain, knifecutery, KlJli-EPsY positive ly cured by Our new aud never failing hoapi tal treatment, FREK EXAMINA.TI< iNS of the urme. chemical and microscopical, in all cases of Kidney Diseases, Bright's Disease, Diabetes and Spermatorrhea. Bring epsci> v ens, WONDERFUL CURES perfected in all cases that have been neglected or unskili- fnlly treated. No experiments or failures We undertake no Incurable cases, but cure thousands given up to die Remember the date and eome early as his rooms are always eiowoed Cases and cenrsspondence csnfldential, and treatment sent .by sxpress with full direct ions tor use, but personal consultation pre ferred. OR. D. O. FRUTH. 8B32 Lake Avsnue, Chicago. #2.25 12.00 If yon want a fins DRESS SHOE, mads ta fiistataat styles, don't (My $6 to $8, by my $3, $3.30, $4.00 or $5 Shot. Tbey fit equal to custom mads and look tal wear as we!!. Ifyoo wlshtoeconomlieft! your(b«twssi| do to by purchasing W. L Douglas Shoes. Nam* sai pries stamped on ths bottom, look lor it when yon hqi W. 1* DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. Soldbjf MMON STOFFEL, l*«Hr MellflUX Caveats, and Trade-M arks obtained, a nd all Pat- [ i i ent business conducted lot Modcratc Fees. Our Office is Opposite; U. 8. Patent Office and we can secure patent in less time tiian those remote from Washington. Send model, diawing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured, j A Pamphlet, "HowtoObtain Patents,'* withi cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries\ I sent free. Address, , C.A.SNOW&CO. Opp. patewt Office, Washington, D. C. PATENTS Csrc:'- Trafo-marb, . . Aid all Patent business conduetsd lot MODERATE FEES. ; I - Information and advloagtvsn to tev«tto«*i8te^C • Cbaigs. Addrwa 'i# . PATENTS. * t ^ """ •^0 Si J f m ' - •y\ ^ * 'y , * „ Vji' J *'• ^ * mi.f * i*. ji. .«xa* •'CA'v -4-• .f ;;f'P i.}' J& .fcis&v* FOH PROTECTION, NOT FOR ORNAMENT frtte DDD01S ft DUBOIS, Patent Attorney Invent >•-» Age Building, w**».4#gton, d. e. BsokJhn*. 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