TERMS OF SUISCRIPtlOH, 51.50 Per Year. mrjetly in Advance 1 . i WHaaMMMBK; 1 r THE SPLENDID SPUR THE ADVENTURESOF JACK MARVEL. feu By-ARTHUR T. QUILLER COUCH.J CHAPTER III. (Continued.) A pretty shout -went up as I pick'd gijself off the turf and rush'd for the tiack door. Twas unbarr'd, and in a moment I found myself tearing down itbe passage and out into the Corn Market, with a score or so tumbling downstairs at my heels, and yelling to stop ni. I know- there was no possibility to get past the city gates, which were veil guarded at night. My hope reaeb'd no further than the chance of outwitting the pursuit for a while longer. In the end I was sure the pot boy's evidence would " clear me, and therefore besan to enjoy the fun. Even ipjT certain expulsion from College n the morrow seein'd of a piece with ibe rest of events and (prospectively) a matter for laughter. For the strug gle at tli? "Crown" had unhinged my wit?, as I must suppose and you must believe, if you would understand my feeliavior in the next half hour. A brig'ut thought had strtick me; and taking a fresh wind, I set off again xouad the corner of Oriel College, and lown Morton street toward Master Timothy Carter's house, my mother's cousin. This gentleman, wiio was Town Clerk to the Mayor and Corpora tion of Oxford was also in a sense siy guardian, holding in trust about 100 (which was all my inheritance), ami spending the same jealously on my education. He was a very small, pre cise lawyer, about sixty years old, shaped like 'a 'pear,"" with a prodigious self-iruportaat manner that came' of associating with great , men: and all the knowledge I had of him ,was piek'd Tip on ilie rare occasions (abont-iiceJ .1 year) that I iin d at his table. He had ai'ly married and lost an aged -silce-ar, whose jnoney had -been --the '-making of fcioi; ciidThad more; respect for law and authority than any three men in Oxford. So that I reflected, with a kind of desperate hilarity, on the sreelic? he was Jike to give me. This kinsman of mine had a fine liouse at tiie eiist end of Merton street as you turn into Logis Lane; and I was ten yards from the front door, unQ running my fastest, when sudden Jj? I trinp'd and fell headlong. Before 1 ctmld rise, a hand was on my shoulder, and a voice speaking in my ear: ''Pardon, comrade. Wo are two of a trade, I see." 'Twas a fellow that had becm lurking at the corner of the lane, and had thrust out a leg as I pass'd. He was pricking-up his ears now to the cries of "Thief thief !" that bad already reach'd the head of the street, and were drawing near. ; "I am no thief." said I. ';Quick!" He dragged me into the shadow of the lane. "Hast a crown ia thy Docket?" k "Why?" "Why? For a good turn. I'll fog theso gentry for thee. Many thanks, comrade," aa I pull'd out the last few shillings of my pocket money. "Now pitch thy sword over the wall here, and set thy toot on my hand. 'Tis a rich man's garden, t'other side, that I was meaning to explore myself; but another night will serve." '"Tis Master Carter's," said I, "and he's my kinsman." "Zounds! but never mind, up with thee! Xow mark a pretty piece of play. 'Tia pity thou sliouldst be across the wall and unable to see." He gave a great hoist; catching at the coping of the wall, I pull'd myself BP and sat astride of it. i.. "Good turf below ta-ta, comrade!" !' But now the crowd was almost at the' corner. Dropping about eight feet on to good turf, as the fellow had said, I pick'd myself up and listen'd. "Which way went he?" call'd. one, 8s they came near. "Down the street!" "No; up the lane!" "Hush!" "Up the lane, I'll be sworn." "Here, band the lantern !" etc., etc. ' . While they debated, my friend stood vloseon the other side of the 'wall; but now I heard him dash suddenly ut, and up the lane for his life. "There he goes!" "Stop .him!" the ries broke out afresh. "Stop him, i' the King's name!" The whole pack went peltiug by, shouting, stumbling, swearing. For two minutes or more the strag glers continued to hurry past by ones and twos. As soon as their shouts died ay, i drew freer breath and look'd around. "'I was in a small, turfed garden, well stoek'd with evergreen shrubs, at the back of a tail house that I knew foi Master Carter's. I remembered that he Princes Rupert and Maurice lodged with my kinsman, and, ' breaking in upon them, I so gained their- favor that they obliged Master Carter to pay toe ray inheritance on the spot and escorted me themselves to the city ?ates, whence I set out on my travels. CHAPTER IV. Adventure at the "Three Cups." So puffed was I by the condescen sion of the two princes and my head o busy with big thoughts that not till was over the bridges and climbing fle mgh ground beyond South Hinck 8e3 with a shrewd northeast "wind at back, could I.spare time for a sec ad backward look. I pulled out the Jetter that Anthony had given me. In oe moonlight the brown smear of his , XViy OW Ay v a II VWWVV .11; 71 VVvV miAV iVlVAVVAJ AN V ' I VOL,. AAylL PITTSBORO. OH ATH A M PmTNTTY N P. . THTTPftn A pwrph adv no mne vrrv no blood was plain to see running across the superscription: "To our trustyand well beloved Sir Ralph Hopton at our Army in Corn wall these." . 'Twas no more than I looked for. yet the sight of It and the King's red seal quickened my step as I set off again. And I cared not a straw for Dr. Kettle's wrath pn the morrow. .. Having no desire to fall in with any of the royal outposts that lay around Abingdon, I fetched welt away to the west, meaning to shape my course for Faringdon, and so into the great Bath road. 'Tis not my purpose to describe at any length, my itinerary, but rather to reserve my pen for those more mov ing events that overtook me later. 'Twas about 5 in the evening, and I still laboring along, when, over the low' hedge to my right, a man on a ; sorrel mare leaped easily as a swallow, and alighted some ten paces or less in front of me; where he dismounted and stood barring my path. The muzzle of his pistol was In my face before I could lay hand to my own. "Good evening!" said I. "You have money about you, doubt less," growled the man curtly, and in a voice that made me start. For by his voice and figure in the dusk-1 knew him for Captain Settle; and in the sor-' rel with the high white stocking I recognized the mare Molly, that poor Anthony Killigrew had given me al most with his last breath. ' .The bully did not know me, having but seen me for an instant at "The Crown," .-.and then . in - very i different . attire. i "I have but. a few poor coins," I an sweredv r :V ,1'-.' !' '. 'v'-i. .'.:'.. : "Then ha nd'cni-over." 7 " - ; : J , "Be shot -ifrdoT: said I in a pas,n; .and pulling, out a iandf ul from my pocket, ..It Tiasiied ; them down ia the road. " ' ' For a moment the Captain took his pistol from my face, and stooped to clutch at the golden coins as they trickled and ran to right and left. The next, I had struck out with my right flst, and down he went staggering. His pistol dropped out of his hand and exploded between my feet. I rushed to Molly, caught her bridle, and leaped on her back. It was a near thing, for the captain was rushing toward me. But at the call of my voice the mare gave a bound and turned; and down the road I was' borne, light as a feather. - - V A bullet whizzed nast mv oar: I heard the Captain's curse mingle with the report; and then was out of range, and galloping through the dusk. Secure of pursuit, and full of delight in the mare's easy motion, I must have traveled a good six miles before the moon rose. In the frosty ky her rays sparkled cheerfully, and by them I saw on the holsters the silver demi-bear that I knew to be the crest of the Kil iigrews, having the fellow to it en graved on my sword hilt. So now I was certain it was Molly that I be strode, and took occasion of the light to explore the holsters and saddle flap. Poor Anthony's pistols wtre gone filched, no doubt, by the Captain; but you may guess my satisfaction when, on thrusting my hand deeper, I touched a heap of coins, and found them to be gold. Ifwas certainly a rare bargain I had driven with Captain Settle. For the five or six gold pieces I scattered on the road, I had won close on thirty guineas, as I counted in the moonlight; not to speak of thla incomparable Molly. And I began to whistle glee fully, and taste the joke over again and laugh to myself, as we cantered along with tha north wind at our backs. All the same, I had no relish for rid ing thus till morning. For the night was chill enough to search my very bones after the heat of the late gallop; and, moreover, I knew nothing of the road,. which at this hour was quite de serted. So that, coming at length to a tall hill with a black ridge of pine wood standing tip against the moon like a fish's fin, I was glad enough to note below it, and at some distance from the trees, a window brightly lit, and pushed forward in hope of enter tainment. The building was an inn, though a sorry one. Nor, gave for the lighted window, did it wear any grace of hos pitality, but thrust out a bare shoulder upon the road, and a sign that creaked overhead and looked for all the world like a gallows. Round this shoulder of the house, and Into the main yard (that turned churlfshly toward the hill siue), the wind howled like a beast in pain. I climbed off Molly, and press ing my hat down on my head, struck a loud ratt-tat on the door. Curiously, it opened at once, and I saw a couple of men in the lighted passage. "Heard the mare's heels on the road, Cap Hillo! What in the fiend's name is this?" Said I: "If you are he that keeps this house, I want two things of you first, a civil tongue, and next a bed. "Ye'll get neither, then." : "Your sign says that you keep an Inn." " Aye the .'Three Cups;', but .we're full." y "Your manner of speech proves that to. he a lie.' I liked the fellow's voice so little that 'tis odds I would have remounted Molly and ridden away; but at thla instant there floated down the stairs and ont through the dark-smelling pas sage a sound that made me jump. 'Twas a girl's voice singing: "Hey nonni nonni no! Meu are fools that wish to die! Is it not fine to laugh and sing , When the bells of death do ring" There was no doubt upon it. The voice belonged to' a young gentle woman I had met at Hungerford. I turned sharply toward the landlord, and was met by another surprise. The second man, that till now had stood well hack in the shadow, was peering forward and devouring Molly with his gaze. 'Twas hard to read his features, but then and there I would have wa gered my life he was no other than Luke kettle's, comrade, Black Dick. My mind was made up. "I'll not ride a step further to-night," said I. "Then bide there and freeze," cn swered the landord . ' ' ; He waa for slamming the door in my face, when the other caught him by the arm and, pulling him a little back, whispered a word or two. I guessed what this meant, but resolved not to draw back; and presently the land lord's voice begun again.'betwixe surly and polite- Have ye a too high a stomach toJJe on straw?" "Oho!" thought I to myself, "then I am to be kept for the mare's sake, but not admitted to the house;" and said aloud that I could put up with a straw bed. Because there's the stable loft at your service. As ye hear" (and, in fact, the singing still went on, only now I heard a man's voice joining in the catch) "our house is full of com pany. But straw is clean bedding, and the mare I'll help .to put in stall." "Agreed," I said, "on one condition that you send out a maid to me with a clip of mulled sack, for this cold eats me alive." To . this he consented, and, stepping back into a side room with the other fellow, returned in a minute alone, and .carrying . a ; lantern which, .in , spite of the moon, was needed to guide a stranger across that ruinous yacd. The Care, as we picked our way along, fell for a moment on an open cart shed, and within, on the gilt panels of a coach that I recognized. In the stable that stood at the far end) of the court, I was surnrised to find half a dozen horses standing, ready saddled, and munching their fill of oats. They were cngroomed, and one or two in a lather of sweat that on such a night was hard to aecount for. But I ' asked no questions, and my companion voushsafed no talk, though twice I caught him regarding me curi ously as I unbridled the mare in the only vacant stall. Not .word pass'd as he took the lantern off the peg again, and led the way up a ram shackle ladder to the loft above. He was a fat, lumbering fellow, and made the old timbers creak. At the top he set down , the light, and pointed to a heap of straw in the corner. "Yon's your bed," he growled; and before I could answer, was picking his way down the ladder again. I - look'd about and shiverd. The eaves of my bedchamber were scarce on speaking terms with the walls, and trough a" score of crannies 'at least the wind poured and whistled, so that after shifting my truss of straw a dozen times I found myself Still the centre of a whirl of draught. The candle-flame, too. was puffed this way and that inside the horn sheath. I was losing patience when I heard the foot steps below; the ladder creak'd, and the red hair and broad shoulders of a chambermaid rose into view. She car ried a steaming mug In her hand, and mutter'd all the while in no very choice talk. The wench had a kind face, tho'; and a pair of eyes that did her more credit than her tongue. "And what's to be my reward for this, I want to know?" she panted out, resting her left palm on her hip. ' "Why, a great or two," said I, "when it comes to the reckoning. "Lnd!" she cried, "what a dull young man!" . "Dull?" Aye to make me ask for a kiss in so many words;" and with the back of her left hand she wiped her mouth for frankly, while she held out the mug ;her right ' ' . "Oh!" I said, "I beg your pardon, but my wits are frozen tip, I think. There's twu, fox, interest; and another if you tell me whom your master entertains to-night, that I must be content with this crib." She took the kisses with composure and said- ' v -i.. "Well to begin, there's the gentle folk that came this afternoon with their own carriage and heathenish French servant; a cranky old grandee and a daughter with more airs than a peacock; Sir Something-or-other Kllli gew Lord bless the boy!" For I had dropp'd the mug and spilt the hot sack all about the straw, where it trickled away with a frag rance reproachfully delicious. "Now I beg your pardon a hundred times; "but the chill is in my bones worse' than ague;" and huddling my shoulders tip, I counterfeited a shivering fit vwith a truthfulness that surpris'd myself.. "Poor lad!" v s "And tis first hot and then cold all down my spine." - " "There, now!" "And goose flesh and flushes all over my , body. .; ("Dear heaut and to pass the night in this grave of a place!" ; "And by morning I ehall be In a high fever; and oh! I feel I shall die of itr , ' (To be continued.) A wage statement for Kansas shows that a college education fits a young man to earn $1.08 at harvesting; with out the college education he gets I2JS0. I'oeket Art CoibIdk In. A sure-to-be-welcomed-with-joy bit of information is that pockets are com ing in again. . It is not only.that the winter coat will show more pockets than for many a long season, but ac tually that, the tailor-made dress-skirt will be made with a big, roomy pocket. However, the dressmakers who have at least consented-to make a skirt with a pocket are issuing; notices to their patrons who order these skirts, to the effect that the pocket is not to be used as a substitute for the generous "Peggy from Paris" bag or any of the other big wrist-bags which the shops are showing. Woman's Home Companion. Great Bautifier. Though tfuln ess for others and un selfishness are great beautifiers. . For all perfection of skin and "feature won't make up for an unlovely expression, and such an expression can come only from a sweet nature, says Christine Terhune Herrick in the Philadelphia North American. We are not all of us born with pretty faces but we an all of us try to get both. And there is some satisfaction in working on one's disposition. You may not be abte to alter the shape of your nose or to make large melting eyes out of a pair of optics that are good for little except seeing. But if you cultivate an inter est in those about you, if you try to make the world happier for those with whom you are brought into . associa tion, you will not fail before-long to get a pleasing expression that will make the physical defects be forgotten, or. to seem charms because they are part of a lovely and generous person ality. Try it! And, at the same time, keep up the care of the body! The Right of Children. "We must interpret the laws for the protection of the young against cruelty, oppression and injustice," says Henry van Dyke in Everybodys Magazine, "as evidence of the world's growing sense of justice. Beginning with the Factory Act of 1833 and the Mines and Collieries Act of 1842 in England, there has been a steadily increasing effort to diminish and prevent the degradation of the race by the enslavement, of child hood to labor. Even the parents'-right of control, says the modern world, must be held in harmony with the child's right to life and growth, mental, moral and physical. The law itself must recognize the injustice of dealing with young delinquents as if they were old and hardened criminals. No more herding of children ten and twelve years old in the common jail! Juvenile courts and probation officers, asylums and reformatories, ah intelligent and systematic effort to reclaim the young life before it has fallen into hopeless bondage to crime; this is the spirit of civilized legislation to-day. In 1903 no less than ten of the American States enacted special statutes with this end in view." The Upliftlnc Womnn.' The cheering up woman is a real en tity nowadays. Registered on the books of a certain woman's exchange, she dispenses her cheerfulness at so much an hour, and Is in great demand. She reads to invalids, talks to them, sings or plays to them, as the case re quires. She is a bright, hustling little body, with cheery ways and optimis tic temperament. , She will come to you for five minutes or thirty. She will darn your stockings or mend your clothes. She will fix flowers in vases and make your room homelike, or talk to you about every thing or nothing. Personally she is jnst what you would expect such a woman to be. She has a family of her own who rejoices in her optimistic view of life, but she uses her talent also to keep the wolf from the door. There was a time when there was plenty in the home, but financial re verses came,' and with them the need of retrenchment. The husband fell ill and some one must turn breadwinner. It fell upon the wife and mother. To-day she is supporting her family comfortably by acting as a cheering up woman, and her engagement book tes tifies to the success of the experiment and the demand which exists for her services. Indianapolis News. Beautiful Belts and Girdles. The woman who has a dress allow ance will this season put aside an un usually large proportion for belts and girdles. The belt's the thing, and just one step ahead of it is the girdle, which must really count as the final hall mark on a modiste's best effort, says the Star. First, the belt of the moment is abso lutely round; no pointed effects are permissible. Secondly, the belt must tone perfect ly with either the blouse or the skirt, the only exception being the use of an onion-brown leather beltwitL a tailored suit, which here and there shows a touch of the same coloring. Thirdly, the girdle must be fitted with the same care bestowed on a princess gown or a basque bodice, and the shape must harmonize with the figure and its wearer. The very smart waisted woman must religiously avoid the very high round girdle. Pointed ' effects in the back are for her. ! For wear with tailored suito and shirt waists, suede or leather - belts axe the correct thing. They come in every shade' shown in fashionable suit ings, and a deer-skin belt is one of the fancies of the hour for the girl who likes mannish clothes. . , ... ; .- - An extremely fetching effect in onion colored suede is finished with two buckles, the one in' the back a trifle larger than its companion in the front. These are of gold, but exactly the shape of a Napoleonic hat and studded thickly with topaz. The color combina tion of onion-brown, gold and topaz is wonderfully harmonious. " These, large buckles can be secured to follow the curve of any figure; if the wearer has a perfectly round and trim, waist,, the curve of the budkle is horizontal. If there is a decided dip in the waist line at the back the curve will run ver tically. Many of the buokles on these heavy leather belts lopk like armor plate with eyelets such as may be seen on harness, ana spikes' for catches. They come in silver, gun metal and gold. The girl of more delicate fancy does not use a large heavy buckle on her broad belt, but has four or five very small buckles with leather . straps. These are very effective, but they must-be laced and strapped with care, for the buckles must make a perfectly straight line down the front. Bullet shaped buttons are also used , to finish these broad leather belts. An extravagant leather belt shows chamois skin in the natural tone, slashed to stimulate raw edged broad cloth and finished with gold buckles back and front. Another fancy in leather for the athletic girl demands belts, turn-over collar and cuffs, all of leather, for wear with the mannish tailor suit. These may be stitched in self -tone, hemstitched or done in heavy broderle Anglaise. . The most delicate leather belts are those intended for house wear with the light olored 'cloths which will bo so popular this winter. White suede, and at least four tones of the plain colors; such as blue, heliotrope, pink, green, yellow, as well as American beauty red, appear in the piainstitcbed belt; finished with simple gold buckles. There is absolutely no reason why a girl may not have a belt exactly the same tone as her shirt waist or blouse. They are not good, however, with a really dressy blouse, as they should give a tailored touch to the costume. -Metallic belts will be much worn with tailored suits of all sorts. - Gun metal, silver, plain and oxidized, and gold are employed. There is absolute ly no limit to the price. Imitation metal may be bought cheaply enough on bargain counters at department stores, or miladi millionaire may go into the jeweler's and expend the divi dend from a comfortable investment on a single belt with chatelaine or vanity bag attached. New Haven Reg. ister. Ornaments Increasing; in Faror Tor Hat Buckles and similar ornaments are more favored than seemed likely to be the case at the beginning of the sea son; but they are only prized when of a very handsome sort. Rhine pebbles and finely cut steel, mounted in enam eled metal and cut jet, have "the lead. I have also remarked that one or two milliners are trying to revive a taste for gold galons, but so far I have only seen it applied to white or beige-colored felts, Millinery Trade Review, There is a great fancy for trimming the necks and shoulders of gowns with bands of velvet. These .velvet strip pings go over the shoulder, and over the' arm. A band of velvet also ex tends around the yoke. Perfectly plain black patent leather shopping bags are taking the place of the bright colored and more showy fashion for a season. These are not so large as those previously used, and have plain gun metal or gold clasps. One of the latest novelties in dress materials is a radium-colored silk. It is pearly white, but it is so woven that it seems to give out rays faintly tinged with color. Silver bullion lace makes a fascinating trimming for a gown of this silk. t Bargain counter lengths of sHk are boons to the mothers of growing daughters. Young girls dress simply nowadays, but their gowns are as often made of silk as of cotton. Indeed, the vogue of silk is universal at present, and all ages appear in it. , In Paris, at all the smart gatherings, it is quickly to be noted that the new empire green, a medium turquoise blue, a leather brown, or else the new parrot red a scarlet having not, a trace of pink in it ar the very newest shades with white; and most effective are they in such conjunction. . ; The Louis XV. coats and also the Di rectoire, that are veritable reproduc tions of those historic styles, are rather old-looking for a miss under sixteen years, but there are many modifica tions which adapt them to more youth ful wearers. The Norfolk is ever with us, and is as promising a candidate for favor this season as e?er. Htimor Woe. A foolish young womannamed Clara The rest of her name was O'Hara Just worried and worried, And kept herself flurried, Because she was taU-and so narra 'evclandXeader. ; ''"..' Clerical Jolt. - Is it a sin," she' asked her spiritual adviser, "to take - pleasure in - haviug . people call me beautif ui?" ... , n . v ,r ... "Of course it is, my child,"1 replied the good" old parson. "It " is always wicked to encourage falsehooiUt,Ohi. cago News. .,. . . -' Nu Jade t All. Vv "Isn't that- rouiig man rfbnd of -music ?" exclaimej the young womau. 'I don't know," auswtred Miss Cay enne. "Judging by tha way he will stand up and listen to himself sing by the hour," I should say he isn't."--Chicago Journal. The Confidantes Weil Do you know you are in tho habit of talking to yourself? I wish you'd get over it." V Bell "Why? .Are you afraid 11 tell all of my secrets?" WelI-"No. I'm afraid you'll tell all of niine."--Detroit,Free Tress. It Left Him Qalclc, Bill Bo "I hear you had some money left you?" : " Weary (absently) Yes; it left me.'Vf New York Press. Toe Much Kor the Clnh. "What broke up the ladies' debating society?" "The leading member was told to prepare an essay on the yellow peril. She did so and the opening sentence read: 'Yellow apparel is very trying to most complexions.' ".Washington Star. I Marveled. Tommy "I can count up to five, on me fingers, can't I, ma?" Ma "Yes, Tommy, but-don't brag. I saw a little boy older than you to-day who could count up to fifty." Tommy "Gee whiz! Where did he get all them fingers?" Philadelphia Press. May Fay Dearly. Tessa "I made a great bargain in diamonds yesterday." Belle "How?" Tessa "I promised to marry Jack, and he gave me a big solitaire dia mond engagement ring." t Belle "Don't be so sure; you can't tell yet whether it's a bargain or not!" Detroit Free Press. No Argument Necessary. Judge (twenty-one years hence) "What are all these young men waiting for?" Clerk of Court "It's a lot more fel lows. Your Honor, who have made ap plication to have their first names changed from Alton B. to Theodore." Judge "Let the usual order be en tered in each, case. Call the next." Chicago Tribune. To the Rescue. Doctor (politely, but looking at his watch with visible impatience) "Par don me, madam, but my time Is not my own. You have given me all your symptoms in detail, and now, perhaps, you will kindly er ah " Husband (not so considerate) "Ma ria, he doesn't want to hear your tongue any more. He wants to look at it." London Tit-Bits. Limited as to Choice. "Daggers!" yelled her husband. "Swords! . Razors! Cutlasses! Carv ing knives! Hatchets! Cleaversl Axes!" . "What do you mean by that?" de manded the irate Mrs. VIck-Senn, who had been taking him to task severely for his various shortcomings. "I'm trying to get in a word edge wise." Chicago Tribune. I To Attain the Hpeed timl t. "I think I'll try filling the tires of my ' automobile with illuminating gas," said the amateur chauffeur. "Good joke," gurgled his fool friend. : "Expect to make it light. Ha, ha!" "Nothinrr of the kind," replied tha amateur chauffeur; "I thoTight it might increase the speed of the machine. Just thinkhow the tfoitf makes the wheels of a gas meter spin around." Chicago News. - TTU tast WUh Gratified. "No," said the billionaire, with deep conviction In his voice, "I would con sider myself in error indeed should I die while I have even a tenth o. the wealth I now possess. It is my wish to die comparatively poor." i' "Oh, you dear old pa;.a!" exclaimed his fair and only daughter as she em braced him. "I'he duke proposed last j night and I accepted him. . Isn't that I Just your luck?" -Judge. - RATES OF : ADVERTISiriGr"' On squara, on interttbi '""Clit One square, two insertions , l.W Ooe square, one month " 3. S3 lor Larger Advertise- .., . ; monfo I 1 horn I f sri tracts win oe maae. .rTbc,, Slaby-Arco-Braun , system . of ; wireless telegraphy is in use across Lake Baikal. -' ' y-1 A new molvbdenum compound has been discovered by Professor Moissan. It is obtained by heating charcoal with A melted molybdenum and aluminium in ,-. the electric furnace. The , resultant metallic mass Is treated with a concen- ' trated solution of potash, says the H.n- '. cineerlne and Mining , Journal, and well-defined needle-shaped crystals bfy- the new compound are . obtain ea. xue substitution is very hard, and resist all acids but nitric. It is not decom- . posed by water or steam at" a tempera ture below COO degrees C. It resembles tungsten .carbide. It is hoped that the new. compound may be. useful ia making, molybdenum steels, . , Consul-General Guenther at Frank- fort reports-that the chemi&t, VerneuiL has succeeded in makim: artificial rubies, pure and brilliant in color, and annarentlv possessing all the physical properties of natural rubies, by melt ing a mixture of clay and oxid of chromium at a tempera tu.e of tWV degrees, obtained by means of a blaze of oxyhvdrogen gas. The molten mass , when suddenly cooled becomes very hard, and can then be cut and polished- like the natural stone. A ruby weign- ing five pounds has thus been pro- t duced, but so inexpensive is the process that' the value of this huge artificial eem is sold at only S600. Natural rubies of fine color are among the most costly of precious stones. In the great corn and wheat belt of the Middle West improved windmills are now used to develop electric power for general use on large farms. At first the electricity so obtained was em ployed only for lighting houses and . barns, but more recently it has been utilized for running small motors. 'For many years windmills ior raising water to irrigate the land have been almost as common in some parts of the prairie- States as in Holland, but often they, were quite crude in construction. The- Department of Agriculture has now taken up the subject, and. begun the distribution of information among the farmers concerning the latest forms of windmills,- and it is such Improved : mills that are found useful for devel oping electric power. In Germany elec tricity derived from the wind for agrU cultural purposes has been used suc cessfully for the past two years. Al thou eh the problem of color pho toeranhy is still far from solved, prog ress is being occasionally made. A new German discovery that of Dr. Koenie relates to printing from tri color negatives, and depends upon thev use of paper coated with collodion solu tions of colorless compounds of green ish blue, cherry red and yellow dyes that develop the original colors on ex posure to light The set of three negatives is first made under the usual light filters. The printing paper is first coated with the solution of the dye that is changed by light to green ish blue, and, after drying, it is ex posed about thirty seconds under the negative taken through the red filter. When the reauired depth of color is reached, it is fixed in a solution which removes the unaltered 'dye compound. The paper is then recoated, this time with the collodion for the red. print. and exposed in exact register, Tinaer the green negative. After this is fixed the third coating is made, and the yel low image is developed under the blue negative. ' 1 Artificial cotton is now 'made from various woods, as from pine in Ba varia and from fir in France. In the French process, the wood, freed from bark and knots, and pulverized by ft special machine, is steamed ten hours in a horizontal brass lead-lined cylinder of 3500 cubic feet capacity, after which 2000 cubic feet of a bisulphate of soda wash is added and the whole is heated thirty-six hours under a pressure of three atmospheres. The fibre, thus made very white, is then washed and v ground by a series of strong metallic meshes, after which it is given electro chemical bleaching by chloride of lime. The mass is dried between two power ful rollers. The resulting pure cellu lose is reheated in a tight metal boilei with a mixture of chloride of zinc and hydrochloric and nitric acids, to which is added, a little castor oil, casein and . gelatine to give resistance to the fibre, The very consistent paste produced ii drawn into threads through a kind of draw plate. The threads are passed over gummed clojh, then Immersed 1b weak carbonate of soda solution, dried between two slowly turning cylinders . and finally given solidity by an ammon iacal bath. The S!jrn .Kril Snreadlnj?.. . . . The fuss about the framed signed la' the New York City Subway has start ed an outbreak of the billboard fevet in an entirely new direction.' Men were going around the downtown .skyscrap ers last week putting up small framed signs In the elevators. They were hung up and down the steel sides and the back of the car, advertising mani curists, stenographers, breath ' sweet eners, patent medicines, sign paintera stationers and various other persons with whom men who ride much in ele vators are assumed to have business In many cases they were flimsily fas ter-ed together and toppled down at the least provocation. A man whe jostled against a Rign in a ' crowded -car was likely to bring the entire outfit on the heads of himself and his un offending fellow passengers. No. York Press.