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Show MEDICAL EXAii!a3ER States Treasury United the mends Pe-ru-n- Recom-- l.phis, Lrobis, writes: a. I Past Profits ner- - "To a society woman whose force is often taxed to the utmost rZlack of rest and i regular meals I of so much nnw of nothing which is as Peruna. I took it a few t hg ago when I felt my strength Jiving away, and it soon made itbelf in cdvinEr me new strength I mrs.X.Scnneiuer, ttuv thirty Chicago, 111., writes: Place. taking several remedies wxth-iresult, I began last year to take I was our valuable remedy, Peruna. complete wreck, llad palpitation of hands and feet, female he heart, cold sink- -' weakness, no appetite, trembling, feeling nearly all the time. You said was suffering from systemic catarrh, ad I believe that I received your help I followed your a the nick of time. y lirections carefully and can say hat I m well aaD- - I cannot thank cure. rou enough for my Peruna cures catarrh wherever locatnor an experi-aeed. Peruna is not a guess it is an absolute scientific Peruna has no substitutes no ivala Insist upon having Peruna. A free book written by Dr. Hartman differ-n- t (he subject of catarrh in its be will sent and stages, phases fits to any address by the Peruna ticdicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. Catarrh is a systemic disease curable A rem-d- v inly by systemic treatment. that cures catarrh must aim directly This is It the depressed nerve centers. ivhat Peruna does. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Ur. Hartman, giving a 'all statement of your case and he will valuable ad-rij pleased to give you his gratia Address Dr.-- Hartman, Pesident of Die Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. at After to-da- nt cer-aint- v. .VTWWWvrTVVTVWWWWWWVVVVV LLEWELLYN JORDAN, Examiner of the U. S. Treasury Department, graduate of Columbia College, and who served three years at West Point, has the following to say of DR. Peruna: Allow me to express my gratitude to you for the benefit derived from your wonderfjl remedy. One short month has brought forth a vast change and now consider myself a weii man after months of suffering. Fellow sufferers, Peruna wilt cure you. Peruna immediately invigorates the s which give vitality to the mucous membrr.nea Then catarrh disappear Then catarrh is permanently cured nerve-center- DONT STOP TOBACCO to inures the nervous system do so. Use Suddenly. It and it will tell you when to stop as it takes away the desire for tobacco. You have no right to ruin your health, spoil your digestion and poison your breath by using the filthy weed. A guarantee in each box. Price $1.00 per box, or three boxes for $2.50, with guarantee to cure or At all good Druggists or direct from us. Write for free booklet BACO-CUR- refunded. noney - CHEMICAL CO., ZUREKA La Crosse, WIs. Consider Kaisers Dignity. Foreign comic papers are being subjected to a strict censorship In Germany just now. A special lookout Is being kept for those published In America which contain pictures considered disrespectful to the kaiser. Great Piece of Railroad Work. A With the completion of work on the western division, the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railway Company will have practically a new double track main line through the State of Iowa. For several years an enormous work has been going on and millions of dollars have been expended In reducing grades, taking out curves, building double track and putting in new steel bridges. AMti&st. N. L. $3AS SHOES B" & L. Douglas shoes are the stan-lar- d of the world. This is the reason )3 W. Douglas makes and sells more L. V. DOUGLAS than any nens $3.00 and $3.r0 shoes ither two manufacturers. )fi. L. DOUGLAS $4 SHOES CANNOT BE EXCELLED. 12,340.000 11,103,820 :JS?:L XrSL feathers, h'eyl's imported and American 'ateet Calf , Enamel, Box Calf Calf, Vici Kid. Corona uaed. olt, Hat. Kangaroo. Fast Color Eyelet Best 'ifttinn genuine have W. I. DOUGLAS rauuuu Ii Th name and price stamped on bottom Shoes by mail, 25c. extra. IUus. Catalog free, W. L. DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. Advantage Bees Have. By a series of experiments a scientist has come to the conclusion that bees are not so intelligent as house flies. The former are certainly better at repartee. Springfield Republican. Stops the Cough and Works Off the Cold Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price 25c. Switzerland's Big Export Record. Switzerland is, population considered. the greatest exporting country In the world, not even England being excepted, and Its exports are almost exclusively manufactured articles. Pisos Cure for Consumption la an Infallible medicine for coughs and colds. N. W . Samcbl, Ocean Grove. N. J.. Feb. 17. 1900. PAY WHEN New Englands Oldest Lawyer. Albert W. Paine of Bangor, Me., Las practiced law continuously for sixty-seve- n CURED. If yon suffer from any of the weaknesses or diseases caused by lgnor-no- e, exoess or oontaglon you are the very person we want to talk to. We have proved our DB. Q. W. SHORES. skill lnourlngall Chronic dl aeanea by pubUahtng tumsandB of voluntary testimonials cf home peo-1- s, giving names piotnren and addresses. Ws ssn't publish our cures in private diseases ecssse It would betray influence. Hence we lave to prove our skill Id bis class of troubles In nothur way. This Is our Ism Ws cure you first and ban ask a reason-tbl- s fee when you are de- end upon our word; eny enk Id Uteh will endorse I. thousands of patients art tndorted us. Now s to cure oc with the distinct indsrsteudln, that we tu aot demand a fee mill we cure yon. We are Lott Manhood, Seminal Weakness, Varloooele. perms lorrboes. Gonorrhoea, Syphilis end all eakoetses of men. Consultation and advice free, if letter or in person. Call or write. sred. Ton on win years, having been admitted to the Penobscot county bar on May 28, 1825. He is the oldest lawyer In point of continuous service In New England. Mrs. Winslows Soothing Byrnp.' For children teething, softens the gums, reduces in datamation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Increase of Gun Power. In 1860 the four and a half Inch iron plate waa declared invulnerable; today, it could be pierced by a little at short range. Hall, Catarrh Core Is a constitutional cure. Price, 75a Praiaee American Scenery. Paul Llndau declaree in a recent magazine article that the deepest Impression he had ever received on his travels in the new or the old world was given by the Grand Canyon of the Colorado river, In Arizona. WE CURE CATARRH dlse68 of the Lvofi, Heart, md All toiDAcb. Liver, Klrioeye, Bladder. Nerves, Skin, irsto, and all Cbronie diseases of men, women and 'hlldren. 1 9 a. m. to 4 Offlee Hours Evenings 7 to 8. Sundays and Holidays )RS. SHORES ft 10 to 13, SHORES, EXPERT SPECIALISTS. Second So. St. SALT LAKE CITY. LYON BLOCK. 56 W. SS'K'G.fl'! PENSION IF will B1CK.F0KD, Washington. D. C.. they B. 5th N.H. Vole btaff 20th . receive quick replies. Corps Prosecuting CUims since 1 8 7 $ RELIABLE 3oM. ASSAYS. $ .78 $ 'ii Gold and Silver .vti Gol-l- , Silver and Copper l.W PROMPT RETURNS ON MAIL SAMPLES. Lead )GDEN ASSAY CO. . HOWARD E. BURTON, Shkmi.-I 111 East Fourth Street, IseadviUe. Colo, Specimen price: Gold, 60c; Gold Silver, 76o; Gold, Silver A Lead, 11: Gold, Silver 4 Copper, 11.60. Mail-lin- g envelopes sent to guy address. Laboratory cyan-ild- e tests, 1U to 26 lbs 15. A M and marry, W. LIVE 1L0KF? Kotal?e 5 piiotou fo? i&j, Uert A Uapd, Ransaa city, N.U.. Sal? Lake-N- o. 28. 1902 lufitsWtrtt all list TailsT nest Cough Syrup. Tau Good. Use Intltre. frld hr dniwiu saBZEaEZZC . Good Things to Eat From Libbys famous byiBlc kltchons. wheroiiuruy prevails. All meets used in , LIBBYS Natural Flavor Food Products t7. 8 Government Tnerocfd. The wbelesomw nees aud goodue of every article preserved in bendy Its preparation for A?our convenience, in theshelves eupply on your panfry key opening canenables you to have slsij i bau the eseeUes Hoe te to the very bet meal. The littleell book, about tbem-s- ent Make Good Thing to Eat, tells free. Ubys Atlae of the World, mailed free f It) cents postage. LIBBY, McNEILL A LIBBY, CHICAOO. suw AiC V Jt xt "v M wifigBlanchGrey, 174 Alabama street, Tenn a society woman of y. i!4ik.'X ... wv ... AGRlCUtf Women Also Recom mend Porivna. Ic kV kV VV Z Strawberries. It is Interesting to go back k i mind to the time when strawberry growing first became popular in this country. The real Interest in strawberry raising began just before the Civil War. Strawberries of the cultivated varieties weie then very uncommon. The wild ones sold for pernts a quart. When the haps 10 improve., varieties came into the market they commanded a very high price, especially just before or after the natural season for the will. ones. By the end of the war the profitable culture of strawbernes was drawing a good deal of attention. Men made from JCOO to $S00 on single acres of ground. The phenomei al profits induced thousands to rush into the business. In time the prices dropped so that many cultivators that went in with high hopes of making great fortunes abandoned the business in disgust. Following that came a season when the industry of strawberry growing had settled down to a commercial enterprise on commercial lines, where it has remained ever since. Though the profits are not now phenomenal, yet they are sufficient to insure a continuance of the very large supplies of the most popular of all berries. In ' kJkV Vk I H, In Srleciing Feeders. Quality. We may well dlstiffit-j- h between what might be called (a) general quality and (b) handling quality, (a) General quality. By general quality la tnernt general refinement of external conformation as seen In the head, horn, bone, compactness and smoothness of outline. General quality is affected by nothing so much as breeding: in fact the two are very closely associated. We seldom find good quality in a plnin'y bred steer and we generally find it in the well-brehigh grade animal. The desirability of general quality can not be too strongly emphasized. While It Is a characteristic that Involves many yoints and is difficult to describe, its presence or absence is quickly discerned by the trained eye of the Intelligent buyer. It is this characteristic in the Stockers and feeders more than any other we depend upon as Indicating that the animal has within It the possibility of making a market topper or at rny rate a prime steer. The ability to select Stockers and feeders having within them the possibility of making prime steers is one of the first and most important lessons for the stockman to learn. Profits in steer feeding come not so much from skill in feeding and management as from Intelligent buying and selling. The profit resulting from an increase during the fattening period, of the value per pound of the total weight of the animal Is as Important as that resulting from the method employed In the feeding and management. It Is seldom possible to produce at a profit gains which do not increase the value per pound of the total weight of the animal. Hence the importance of Intelligent buying, or the selection of feeders and Stockers of good quality. (b) Handling quality. Good handling quality indicates that the possessor is a good feeder. It shows that the animal is in good health or thrift and capable of beginning to gain as soon as an abundance of food Is supplied. We speak of cattle as possessing good handling quality when the skin is mellow and loose. A thick, mossy coat of hair of medium nneness and a moderately thick skin are also desirable. Prof. Herbert W. Mum kW J? W W fj( Aik 5y, kVW w k0V kV ' kV YJtf V kj i&itv V a 4' m kr V 4' V N kff kV k M o o o kV X XV kV A? 4 d, re-se- JC '4 Ak AW 4 4 k RACULUM Biting and Sucking Insects. Briefly stated, there are two classes of Insects biting and sucking. The latter group includes those insects which injure the plants by Inserting their tube-lik- e mouth parts Into the plant tissue and draw up the sap of the plant Common forms of these insects are the scale insects, red spiders, wooley aphis and other plant lice. The remedy must be one that kills by contact with the Insect body such as kerosene, kerosene emulsion the soap mixtures. The biting insects are those which chew and swallow some portion of the plant or fruit The grasshopper, many beetles and the codling moth larvae are good Illustrations. The direct poison, such as Paris green or other arsenleals, which can be applied to the part of the plant that is eaten by the Insect are the surest remedies. New Mexico Experiment Station. The catalpa tree is growing in favor as a tree for fence posts. It Is a quick ford. grower, as trees go, and the wood will Sweet Clover as a Soil Amellorant. last a long time when used for fence posts. Hardy varieties only should Bulletin 233, Ohio Station: Those be grown. who have carefully observed the habThe reason why more trees are not its of the wild sweet clover (otherplanted Is that It takes too long to wise known as Bokhara clover or mel-ilo- t) have noticed that its volunteer bring them to any size. The farmer wants quick returns. growth Is practically confined to roadsides where the surface soil has been Sweet Corn. scraped away or where the ground has Sweet corn for family use should be been puddled by trampling, and to simplanted at different times throughout ilar locations elsewhere, such as the the season, that the users may have bottoms of abandoned brickyards or It coming on at convenient periods. places in pasture fields where the soil The same Is true If green com Is to has been trampled while wet, or hillhe sold In the market There are sev- sides from which the surface soil has eral advantages In the raising of been washed away. It is practically sweet corn. One of them Is that sweet never found invading pastures or corn can be harvested much cheaper other lands which have been kept in than can field corn, as the harvesting good condition. At the Ohio Expericonsists only In going through the ment Station the seeus of this plant fields and snapping off the ears that have repeatedly been sown on soils are ready to use. Another advantage which were merely thin, but not is that the stalks may be fed green washed or puddled, but Invariably to the milch cows, and will produce without success. The only case in a large revenue in that way, provided which it has been Induced to grow a farmer have several cows that are was where it was sown on the bottom giving milk. The fact that It does of an old brickyard at Columbus in not all reach marketable size at the 18S8. Here - full stand and vigorous same time makes It far easier to han- growth was obtained, and the crop itself dle the crop than Is the case with was allowed to stand and field com. In addition, there is no until the fall of 1891, when It was fear cf fall frosts, for the com does plowed under and the land sown to not have to be ripened and thus wheat The result was a yield of 26.9 makes the necessary growth In a bushels of wheat per acre on the land much shorter season than does the where melilot had grown, against a field crop. In fact, sweet com can yield of 18.6 bushels on similar land be grown much farther north than alongside, which had been cropped with corn and oats the two seasons san the corn for common uses. previously. The Dust Spray. Developing the Rice Industry. It Is reported from Missouri that a The work of introducing new plants was done dust of deal spraying good into this country is proving exceedlast year, but with what' result we ingly beneficial from a commercial do not know. However, It Is believed standpoint The introduction of rice that dust spraying does not prove as from Japan a few years ago illuseffective a3 does spraying with liquids. trates this. Secretary Wilson in a ten recent The dust Is made by report said: In my last report pounds of lime and adding to It one attention was called to the fact that pound of Bordeaux mixture in three the introduction of Japanese rice requarts of water. The lime absorbs sulted in an increased production, the liquid portion to such an extent amounting to at least $1,000,000, of that dust results that can be used in this commodity in Louisiana, and furthe dust sprayers. Some of the ex- thermore, that the Impetus given to perimenters say that while It Is true the work in Louisiana and Texas led that the dust spray is not so good as to the Investment of not less than the liquid spray, yet three sprayings $20,000,000 in the Industry. In 1900 with the dust spray can be given with about 8,000,000 pounds more rice were the same amount of labor required to produced than in 1899, and this year give one treatment of the liquid spray- 65,000,000 pounds more were produced ing. The dust spray is still in the ex- than in 1900. With the rapid Inperimental stage. If any reader of crease in our own production the imthe Fanners' Review has used it we portation of rice from foreign counwould be pleased to hear from him tries is falling off, as shown by the fact that in three years the Imports relative to its success in his case. have decreased from 151,000,000 pounds to 73,000,000 pounds. All the Starting Cantaloupes. Cantaloupes can be started in hot increase in home production can not, houses and afterward transferred to of course, be ascribed to the departthe fields. In some vineyards the ments introduction and distribution practice is followed of sowing one of Japanese rice, but the great imseed in a box the size of a cigar box petus to its production in this counand allowing it to develop to good try was given by the departments insize before transplanting. The boxes troduction three years ago. Eviare then taken to the field and the dently it will be but a few years until sides and ends torn off, the bottoms the United States will not only grow being left to hold the roots in place. all the rice consumed here, but will When placed in the ground the plants export part of the product as welL go on growing as if nothing had hapNotes from the Range Country. pened, for the pieces of boards reHorn County, Wyoming. The Big of maining do not prevent the spread are in fine conin this ranges the roots laterally. The advantages dition and stockcounty of all kinds are takof this method are several. - One of on flesh fast There were very them Is that while the plants are un- ing few cattle shipped out from here last der glass they are protected from season on account of the large auount their Insect enemies and make a good of cattle that were rushed into the become After strong they growth. corn from markets the producing little do them and vigorous, Insects states, so the shipments of cattle from harm. Of course another advantage this part of the country will be large several are melons the ripened is that, soon as they are in shape for the as otherwise than they weeks earlier market. There are thousands of head . , woull be. of cattle on the ranges in this part of the state that will be ready for marSetting Apple Trees. From the Farmers Review: In your keting by the middle and latter part There will also be large issue of May 2 1 I read an article on of June. of horses and sheep. Our orchard management, in which Mr. shipments is overstocked now, and large county trees advises leaning setting Aldrich numbers are being brought in to the Southeast This presents a month from other states. The every prostrees. new phase as to leaning pects for large crops of small grain adIs southwest nor southeast never were Neither better at this time of year visable. It Is my experience that It than they are now. Frequent showers behave put the ground In fine condition should lean toward jthe sun at twelve and one so we will not have to Irrigate the tween half-pas- t grain this year. Geo. S. Vanderveer. k. Ed rot Gaylord, Iowa. al kV A k kV kx $'5? A' kf? y w 4 V it. V k Wouldst live? Then suffer much! Drink deep the draught of pain, He has not lived or he has lived in vain, Who knows not sorrow has not felt tho touen Of pity tor anothtr weary strife, l alse gilded hope and love; These things are life. h Wouldst hone? Itok not behind! But step upon thf past to higher things.s And seek the sui Shine. Upon fortune wings You yet may soar, and fortune can be kind. not? All life is change Why To all who truly hope. Naught is too Dtrange. Wouldst dream? Look in the west! Drink in the glories of the dying day. Where cloudy headlands dot the glowing bay. Islands of the Where lie the heavenly Blest!" and love true is There things are as they seem. And all is good and fair Tis sweet to dream! Wouldst rest? Keep conscience clear. Do well thy work; nor heed the hurrying throng That tempts aside or bars the way. Be strong; Keep faith, go bravely on without a fear In conscious virtue. They alone know rest Who labor long and well And do their best. Vf k kf 4 4k sf. V A 4' V,k Vjx 04 kV k ky vi? k k iKiti O O O Mr. Tressor knew oMild pcssibly see iL of his loft hur.il. that nouw.1 r H bowed to (he man at the wheel and the monster disk was sent whirling. The interesting little boy who had been brought forth from his home In the orphanage maintained -- y the citizens of the arrondissement. thrust an attenuated hand and arm into the opening in the wheel and drew out & little, glistening copper tube. He bowed as he banded it to M. le Maire. Mr. Tressor was in his element He thrust out his arras and pushed back his sleeves as he was wont to do when assuring purchasers of soap that he had really no means of deceiving them, even if he was so disposed. He received the copper cube gingerly between thumb and forefinger of his left hand, extracted the bit of paper it contained, and opening it before the staring eyes of the multitude after exchanging it for that other morsel which had been concealed between his fingers turned to the blackboard and wrote: B1 18,059. Whereupon every man in the crowd examined his bunch of tickets, and the drawing went on. It was remarked afterwards that M. le Maire had never conducted a drawing with more emprossement. Three days later two smooth-faced- , men met at the Adelphi Hotel in Liverpool. They secured a room together. When they were alone the fair man turned to the dark one and said: Got the coin? Yes.' Did you save that ticket that was first drawn r I did not; I ate it. I dont believe in being found with the goods on me. No? Well, my dear Tressor, you can order me a gallon of your cursed American whisky. Then read that. He handed Mr. Tressor a copy of Le Temps of February 7. Mr. Tressor read: It is now practically settled that the Impersonation of M. .Vigneron at the drawing of the lottery of the fifteenth arrondissement, and the kidnaping of that gentleman, was the result of a wager or an odd practical joke. An examination of the contents of the lottery wheel shows that B118.059, the winning ticket, was regularly drawn." well-dresse- d ite gold brick industry has never thriven here because the government keeps a monopoly of good things to Itself. Every arrondissement In Paris, BY W. B. HENNESSY. the republic Itself, has a lot(Copyright, 1902, by Dally Story Pub. Co.) the city, whenever there Is money to be tery was look man a had sharp The that are not bad. not altogether hidden by the broad ex- had and the pickings One day when I was hard up I bought as he took wore he habitually pression & lottery ticket for twenty sous and the yellow envelop the bellboy handed twelve thousand francs. Since then got him. I have become a patron of the lottery Walt," he said. He tore the cover and I have something coming. I have off and read this: been watching the method of conduct- TO FIND THE MAGNETIC POLE. Paris, France, Dec. II, 1900. ing the lottery and you and I, my To John H. Tressor, friend, are about to draw a capital Capt Amundsen, the Norwegian, to Hotel Metropol, New York: Lead an Expedition in 1903. On the fifth of February the prize. You might spend a few months in R. Amundsen, the NorweCaptain France for the good of your health a who was first officer of the gian, and make it worth your while. Do on that ships trip to the Antarcyou need funds? tic in 1897, proposes to start next PENARD. spring with an expedition to locate Mr. Tressor swung off the bed with the magnetic north pole. more agility than the boy expected, for In 1831 Sir James Clark Ross reachhe dodged back. a position where the dipping needle ed Got a blank? was only deflected one minute from No, sir, said the youth. an absolutely vertical positlcn. the Get one; hurry, said Mr. Tressor. question has been raised whether the When the boy came back the man magnetic pole Is actually only a point moved over the rickety marble top taor whether the peculiarity of the ble and wrote: needle assuming a vertical position Penard, Paris, France: extends over a large area, and further I might; I will; I do. Cable. whether the magnetic pole changes TRESSOR. its position. With the object of solving these two questions Capt. AmundTwo weeks later Mr. Tressor got out sen has purchased the Gjoa, one of the of a train at the Gare du Nord and strongest and best sailing vessels of said: Hullo, Jacques to a tall man the Norwegian arctic fleet, and will with a very long face adorned with a start for the north in the spring of black Vandyke beard. 1903. The Gjoa is to be fitted with a Any luggage? he asked. petroleum engine and will carry a I have, said Mr. Tressor, but your crew of seven men. cussed at Havre It is proposed to leave the ship arronaisse-men- t wanted to charge me toll for bringing lottery of the Fifteenth over everything In the United States is drawn. The capital prize Is either at Matty island or King Wiland I left It with them. a million francs. The drawing is pub- liam Land, says the New York Mail Any letters or names, I mean In lic. It happens that the mayor of the and Express, and as soon as the severyour trunks? asked Penard, sharply. arrondissement fs so exactly like you est part of the winter is over to conDo you think Im altogether dotIn appearance that it took me a month tinue the journey with sledges to the ty? asked Mr. Tressor, in an aggriev- to satisfy myself that you had not set- place on Booshia reached by Ross. ed tone. With which answer M. Pentled down with us and gone In for reSCHOOL FOR JOURNALISTS. ard seemed to be satisfied. spectability. The poor man Is, howAn hour later they pushed back from ever, deaf and dumb his selection for the table which contained the remains the magistracy was due to sympathy A Traveling Scholarship Recently Founded in London. of a dinner to which Mr. Tressor had for his affliction. He presides over , A newspaper would be the last place paid rather more attention than his the drawing. This is the procedure: A great wheel containing copper in which to present carping comments companion. Now, Jacques, said Mr. Tressor, tubes, each holding the duplicate of on the munificence of the anonymous what Is It, my boy? You didnt send one of the numbers in the lottery is benefactor, who has just founded a for me because you were worrying placed on a platform in the hall of traveling scholarship for journalists about my health. I hear you have the mayoralty. A boy taken from one in connection with the City of London been getting along. of the orphan asylums Is set before School. Traveling should be part of Yes, said the dark man; yes I the wheel. The disk is given a sharp the pressmans education no less thaD have got along to that stage where I turn. As it stops the boy thrusts his of the artists, and money spent in think that I can help you to what you hand Into an opening in the wheel giving aspirants to the calling somemost need money. and brings forth one of the cubes. He thing analogous to the Prix de Rome hands it to M. le Maire, who takes or the Radcliffe traveling fellowship I dont suppose you need It yourself, said Mr. Tressor, amiably. How out the enclosed paper and writes the to compete for will be money well innumber printed upon It on a great vested. It Is worth while to point out, much Is there in it? What would you have said to a mil- blackboard beside him. The first num- however, that there is a foreign, lion francs? ber drawn wins the capital prize, though no English, precedent for the That Is two hundred thousand dol- which may be secured upon presenta- endowment. In Norway, two traveling lars and expense money. I dont tion of the ticket containing It scholarships are annually awarded to Do you follow me, Tressor? A man think, said Mr. Tressor, meditatively, journalists by the state, and an interthat there are many things that could as clever in palming things as you view with the first scholar who came not be done for two hundred thousand were when you sold little cubes of to London Karl Keilhan of Chrisdollars, short of carrying off the soap wrapped up In fifty dollar bills, tiania was published. So good an Louvre If it was only to be spilt be- actually sold them, for fifty cents each example can hardly fail to be followed tween two people, he added sharply. without losing any money, and who is in time in other countries, to the adThere are two of us, said Penthe exact replica of the mayor of the vantage alike of newspapers and Fifteenth arrondissement should have newspaper readers. London Graphic. ard, 8ententiously. Then lets get busy, remarked Mr. no trouble In winning the capital Tressor, throwing away his cigarette. prize if the mayor were out of the King Edward a Fire Fiend." Whats the game? way. Edward, from childhood, has King Penards sharp eyes went sharply, It looks easy, said Mr. Tressor, always shown the keenest Interest in and I certainly need the money. You fires and firemen. Of all the enterbuy the ticket and show me how. tainments provided for him by the of New York, he has most often It was cool enough In the hall of city and says he most enremembered, the mayoralty of the Fifteehth arron- joyed, a parade of the volunteer fire dissement of Paris to account for the In his honor. There were shiver that was Indulged by M. Pe- department 6,000 firemen In uniform, and all, save nard as M. Vlgneron who would have those In charge of ropes and tillers, been hailed as Mr. Tressor by at least bore torches. It was a great spectaa hundred men any afternoon on that and the Prince, a3 he looked at cle, part of Broadway lying between the brilliai t display in Madison square enth streets. cried and Thirty-fourt- h This Is for me; repeatedly: New York stepped on to the platis for me! with unaffected glee. this form. , During many years of nis life he used The real to Nothing had happened. be informed whenever a really big M. Vlgneron had been taken care of .blaze was signaled, and he has atrethe night before. He had been so ' tended, Incognito, most of the big joiced at meeting the American art fires In London during the last thirconnoisseur, M. Tressor who looked so very much like him that it was not ty years. Everybody's Magazine. the least trouble in the world for his The Deceitful Man. double to insinuate knockout drops, Official I am greatly grieved, madMr. Tressor into the by green glass filled with absinthe that M. Vlgneron am, to nave to be the bearer oi such was sipping. M. le Maire was com- sad intelligence, but I am obliged to fortably disposed of where he would Inform you, nevertheless, that your "Do you think Im altogether dotty? be very certain to get another drink husband was killed on our railroad but with apparent carelessness, about with more chloral, at any time these Madam Good heavens! Is it posthe room. There was nobody within next three days. '! sible? M. Penard had among a little bunten feet of the pair. Official It is too true, madam. He. For eight years I have had no trou- dle of tickets in an inside pocket one I have sold bearing the number B118.059 which was killed Instantly, and his head and ble," began Penard. some works of art, enough to make a was destined to win the million frans limbs so badly lacerated that all we could recover of him was his trunk. living. It Is safe enough, for your fel- prize. Madam His trunk? Did he have low citizens,' who are my principal cusMr. Tressor was superb In the tomers, think too well of themselves aplomb with which he saluted the fel- his trunk with him? ) The treacherous to admit that they have bought smok- low citizens of the mayor of the Fif- villain! He deliberately told me he ed chromos for old masters. I have teenth arrondissement M. Penard was only going away for the day. Indulged In one luxury. I have bought was very certain that he could see the Probably a necessary evil is a blessmorsel of paper held by Mr. Tressor lottery tickets. You know, ny friend, your favor between the third and fourth finaaca ing in diimiis' Winning a Million. Bel-gic- , fellow-countrym- , Twenty-sev- to-da- |