OVER AND aVKR AOAIN. Over and over a.; in, No-matter which way 1 turn, I always find in th book of life Home Ihhuoii I bave to learn. I murt take in v turn at tlm mill ; i I mtirt grind out the golden grain: I miut work fit my tank wilb a resolute will, Ovor and over again The brook through the meadow flow, And over aud over again The pomh-roiu mill-wheel goes. Onos doing will not suffice, Though doing lie not in vain; And a blessing failing us once or twice May come if we try again. ,JIM HSK'S PALACE-CAR. fitted I'p RrgardleitN of Kxpenoeand Sow Nerving an a Wrrrklug-rar, New York Sun.l On a siding.noar tlie ropair-sliops of the New lork, Lake Erie x Western railroad is an old car, bearing on its Bido tho legend, "Tool -Car." It is usod to carrr the wrecking gang of the Hus' quolianna division and their tools. I was looking at the car, recently, and one of the employes sold : "I suppose you would bo surprised if you knew to whom this car used to be long." "Whoso was it?" I asked. "This car." ho replied, "has rather a remarkable history. When .Jim risk was president of the oM Erie be had a cur built for his own private use, and it was named after JoHie Mansfiold. The car was built down in Delaware some where, I think, and it cost a mint of money. hen r ink ordered it he gave only instructions to build him a car in which he could travel and enjoy himself. hen it was linishod and de livered to Fisk, he was so pleased with the workmanship that ho immediately sent a check for $1,000 to the man who had designed the car and had chargo of tho work. 1 he actual eost of tho car was not far from $75,000, which in those days was an enormous sum for one car. 1 1 was flttod up throughout in the most luxu rious stylo. It was finished inside with oiled walnut and cherry, and tho panels wero adorned with oil paintings, which alone cost a large sum. All thoappniiit- flients of tho cur wero correspondingly expensive At one end were sleeping apartments aud dressing and toilet rooms. 1 he remuindcr of the car was a traveling drawing-room. In thosodays the idea of taking meals on board a train was unheard of, but Fisk used to have wiiib and delicacies for lunch, and hired a butler, whose special duty was to take care of the car wherever it went. "In those day s ho used to do somo protty tall traveling. He had an en gino at his command, and when ho wautod to go over the Erie ho went fly ing along at a rapid ruto, regardless of all other trains, whieli had to got out of the way. It was Fisk who ran the fast train over tho Erie carrying beef to the sufferers by the Chicago tire. When ho made np his mind to send out the re lief truin ho sent for Engineer Ham "Walker, of Fort Jervis, to como to his private olllce. 'Sam,' he says, 'I want you to run that train through to Fort Jervis as quick as (lot! will lot you. If you aro killed I'll look out for tho wifo and little ones.' Walker took tho train through in the unparalleled time of two hours and ten . minutes. Nat Tuft, I tlliuk, took it over tho Delaware divi sion. At any rato it was a tremendous run, and tho Erie beat them all into Chicago. "Fisk was a great favorite with the railroad num. Ho always had a good word for us whenever he was around. Whoa Fisk died the ear was used by his successor for a while and afterward did sonio duty on the eastern part of the road. It afterward found its way hero for repairs. When they came to look it over they decided that it would be useless expense to repair it, and so, after lying on tho switch for a year or two, it was turned into a wreckmg-ear, as you now see it." Havana by Night. New York Telegram. New and strange wore tho sights I saw as 1 passed, a la Haroun al Has chid, through this eity at night, with its far-olf eastern air and multitude of Moorish buildings. Traders plied thoir wares under the gas lights, and Nubians and mulattoes, Creoles and Chinese passed by. The Creoles proper are the children of Spanish parents lnirn hero and their descendants, but the Creoles as generally understood in tho United States aro a mixed race of black and white. Scanty indeed was the raiment of the poorer classes, black and white, and the feminine element of the negroes wero especially liberal in tho display of their persons. Hut one gets used to it and excuses much on the ground of heat. Artists need not go to Algiers to Hud mulatto girls for subjects. They are hero in abundance, w ith all tho voluptu ous play of form, tho fierce, wild desert iu their uncurbed glances, tho deep, dark skin act off by tho armlets and bangles of gold. And here, too, aro the little Spanish boys that Murillo loved to paint, with their close cropped shapely heads, their clear olive skin, bare legged and artistically tattered garments, and the glances half piteous and half humorous in their speaking eyes.' And behold! Take off your hat and bow low, for there passes you tho living realization in noble face and car riage, with no little of the spiritual ex pression in tho features, of many a virgin that the great Spanish master's hand has act on immortal canvas; while these courtyards, surely, that we whirl past, with their branching palms and spouting fountains, and marbio col umns and massive stairways wiuding under tiers of terraces, are his also. Feather loth.; A new kind of cloth is being made iu Lyons from the down of heus, ducks aud geese. Seven hundred and fifty grains of feathers make one square me tro of a light and vory warm water proof cloth, w hich can be dyed, in all shades. Am her fields. Kxcbaugo. The area of amber fields of Frussia is nearly fifty miles long by ten in broadth, and it it reckoned that every twelve square feet of surface? will pro duce a pound, the value of which ranges from 8a up ti sterling. How Matches Are Made. IFtica Herald. 1 1 Given ', the machinery, and tho problem of match making is easily solved. With the aid of the apparatus which the Utica company has two or three men ran turn out from 0U0 to 000 gross of sulphur matches per day. After the machinery bas boon set in motion the first step is to place a block in the splint machine. Willi each movement i of the -.knife twenty-jive splints are cut and at tho same time stuck botweon two slats in tne ucit. They are then carried by tho movement of tho belt through the separator and thonce ovor heated pipes, to dry the timber sulliciently to allow the dipping mixture to penetrate. About fifty feet from the starting point the lielt passes under a couple of rollers, which pressed it just enough to bring the ends of the splints iu contact with tho melted sul phur, which is contained in a pan or vat and kept in a liquid state by the heat from a small furnace sunk in the floor underneath. A little farther on the belt is again depressed, and the tips of the splints are drawn through a block mixture, which gives them the finishing coat. From this point tho matches (they have by this time attained that dignity) fiass down the hall, still traveling as lithcrto, at the height of about a foot and a half from the floor. At a dis tunce of 200 feet from the starting point the belt takes an upward turn, and after ascending four or five feet the matches begin their return trip, rass ing with tho belt over the top of the iron framework, at an elevation of about seven feet, they come back ovor the splint machine, enter the room where the other machine is located, und are there knocked out. As they fall thev are caught by a leather belt, which moves slowly and carries them to a table, where they are taken off by a boy, placod in trays made for the purpos i and taken to the packing-room. The belt completes a circuit once in thirty minutes, and during tho interval several thousand matches are linishod. The match produced is superior in Duality, aud w ill light readily on being lawn across the window glass. This is claimed to bo a crucial test, and in ferior ones can not be ignited iu this manner. On arriving at the packing-room the mutches are plaited in small paper boxes, 100 iu a box. The small pack ages aro then packed in pasteboard boxes containing one-sixteenth or one eighth gross. A World (overnmrnt of 4'anala and t allien. Demerol's Mugnzlne. Count Ferdinand do Lossops has re cently delivered a lecture boforo what is called the Five Academies, in which ho enunciates an epoch-making idea. He insisted that tho maritime highways should no longer bo subjected to the vicissitudes of the active politics of gov ernments. Seas, straits, bosphoruses, and maritime canals must be freely opon at all times, irrespective of all interna tional conflict. Ho said that tho con struction of the Suez canal and the eventual construction of the Fnnama canal have oll'eeted the introduction of a new principle, which is moro impor tant even than tho execution of tho works namely, a vast association of tho capital of tho world, which conduced to the solidarity of the interests of all nations. What a chance is hero for our Ameri can government. Whv should not this great peaceful republic call a meeting of all nations to act upon tho subject of canals and cables ? These ought to be owned and controlled by international commissions in which everv commercial nation should have a representative. War ships or armies should be kopt awav from international canals, and should not bo allowed to vox tho com mcrco of tho world. Tho cables should not bo owned by privato persons any more than the telegraphs on the land, but should bo put in tho control of all the nations of the earth in tho interests of international commerce. These steps would be an ontermg wedge to put a stop to international wars. The Coat of Hoyalty. Chicago Tribune. Mr. Molloy's book, "Courtship Below Stairs; or, lho History of England Under the Last Oeorges, ' has made a sensation. And its largo sale may be taken ns a proof of Air. llradlough s as scrtioii in Paris that the English re public is surely coming. It hns set one clever accountant thinking aud luvosti gating with tho result that ho has ascertained that the house of Hanovor, its mistresses, panderers, debauchees, and ' procuresses, havo cost England moro money than has been spent on its public schools sinco the death of Queen Anne. Foreign KmlgraUou fr'IgnreN, . Tho North German Gaetto qnotos some otncial Italian statistics to show that, despite the lamer. tat ions of the I.iborals as to tho formidable dimen sions of the emigration from Germany. the empire in reality is bettor o'f in this respect than most other European states, in proportion to its population. Taking the figure of population t 100, 000, Norwav, within the last five vears, seut awar tho highest number ol emi grants viz., 003, Sweden til 5, Great Britain 587, Denmark 317, Portugal 200, Switzerland 25:2, Oermany (seventh on tho list) 251, Italy 148, Austria 40, and France 10. From these figures it is also deduced that the maximum of emigration iu each of these countries was generally attained in thesameyear. The Hymn Ho W anted. ((exchange. They say that at a prayer meeting in West Held, Mass., the other night, a good brother rose and said he ''wanted to hear sung that leantiful hymn, 'Spilt Doors.'" Every one looked at every body else in perplexity a moment, and then a quick wilted, sister struck ni "Hates Ajar," which was w hat the good brother wanted. Bright aad.Uladatoae Exchange, John Bright makes notes and head ings of his speeches, and with great eare write down and commits to mem ory all the important passages. Glad stone merely jots down facts and fig ures, and for expression trusts entirely to the moment THE CITY OF PULLMAN. An Oatlajr of S. OOO.OOO--. A Model Town How Good Order Is Me cared. Chicago Letter In New York Sun. It mar well be asked if Mr. Pullman is not too modost, or if be docs not do himself an injustice when he aserte that sentiment has had nothing to do wilb his great work. The city of Pull man, as it stands, roiresonts an outlay of aliont l),000,000. All the building In the place are ownod by the company .Nobody else can obtain possession ot them for the reason that they are no for sale. Thoy are rented to anybody of good character for sums calculated to return 0 per cent, on the investment. So many houses were built at one time they were, of course, put np much cheapor than they could iiave been con st rue ted ouo by one. The rents are, therefore, much less than those asked for houses equally good in the city, or even in lioighlioriiig towns. To supply so larire a population with relimoui and educational facilities became the duty of tho founder of the town, as well as to provide for stores aud mar' kets. A tine schoolhouse was built. and teachers were employed. , A costly church was erected. The Arcade and market place were built, and the church and stores offered for rent. Mr. Pull man knew that the church was a better one than any new society" could afford to occupy. He built it expensively however, for he believed that a congre gation would lie found able to pay for it. The rent is $50 per month. It has not been taken vet, but there are several church organizations, and there is con siderable rivalry among them as to which will obtain the prize. If othr churches are needed they will be built by the companv. Feeling that the town would attrac a good iminy visitors, Mr. Pullman limit the hotel. It is owned and man aged by the company, its landlord, so called, being merely an employe The fire department is owned and operated in the biiiiio way, as also are the livery stable, tho theatre, the public library, and every fixture of the town. stranger arriving at Pullman puts at a hotel managed by one of Mr. Pull man's employes, visits a theatre where all the attendants aro in Mr. Pullman's service, drinks water and burns gas which Mr. Pullman's water and gas works supply, hires one of his outfits from the manager of Mr. Pullman's livery stablo, visits a school in which the children of Mr. Pullman's em ployes are taught by other employes gets a bill changed at Mr. Pullman's bank, is unable to make a purchase of any kind save from some tenant of Mr. Pullman's, and at night is guarded by a tire department every member of which from the chief down is in Mr. Pullman's service Everything is first class iu its way. Tho library has 10,000 volumes, and is the personal gift of Mr. Pullman. The theatre, which, like the library, is iu the second story of the Arcade building, is one of the most elo guntly arranged places of amusement iu the world. Its prices are reasonable, and it is open to dramatic and literary entertainments of the best class only. During tho nrst six months that tho library was open 70 per cout, of the be taken out wero on histor ical, bioguiiuical, or scientific subjects. Although tho city has a population of 7,000, it has no government save that which is exercisod in common over tho entire township, county and state; In other words, there is no corporate gov' ernuiont. No arrest has ever been made within the Pullman trai c. There are no policemen or constables; no justices court, no aldermen, no public functionaries of any description. "How in the world do you govern these people?'1 is a question often asked of Air. rullman. "We govern them," ho says, "in tho same way a man governs his house, his store, or his workshop. It is all simple enough, when you como to look at it. So it seems. A man going there to live applies for a house to tho suiu'rin tendeut, who draws up a lease which may be cancelled by either party on ten days' notice Tho company will not disturb him if he is a good citizen, and he may keep his house as long as he pleases, providuig he does uot sell liquor. Ou the other hand, if ho is dissatisfied and wishes to ' leave ho can do so at any time, and is not eneuninorou witn a lease running a year or moro. Not liquor is sold in the town. Tho only law against it, however, is an unwritten one whereof Mr. Piillniau is tho author. To provide healthful amusement and recreation for the pooplo Mr. Pullman has fitted up handsome boat-houses on Lako Calumet, and this beautiful body of water is niirhtlv covered with bout loads of pleasure seekers, i'here are many organizations among tho work iugmeu, including a debating society, a literary association, a brass band, a base ball club, and others. It is tho desire cf Mr. Pullman to encourage all these as much as possible. He feels the need of a newspaper in tho town, and intends soon to establish one. It will bo edited and managed by his em ployes. He has no selfish purpose in establishing this journal, his solo mo tive Wing to give his people the news at little expense, and attorn them cer tain amusement. He thinks also, since they have organized so many societies, that it will le very entertaining and in structive to thorn to havo their proceed ings reported. Uot II Mixed. Kxehange. Waxahachie, Texas, school children heard of tho Cause insurrection and got it mixed with tho "resurrection." Thev told their teacher that the negroes "had rose from the dead to kill the white people down at Cause." Helping Hint Out From tho French. Yesterday, iu a pharmacy English, enters a young man blonde afflicted of a horrible stuttering. "I wa-wa-want," says he, "some p-jvp-pills of ipip-ip-ip" "Hurrah!" erics himself the phar macist impatientcd. The most polite woman we ever saw was the young lady who would not tutAF into tha mirror luanA aid, it was very rude to look right into one race. Xiao and Woman la Mrxleo. fCor. Ran Francisco Chronicle. ' It is an archaic community, that in which we find ourselves. Each lover has his lass; and though the Mexican girl is ever faithful, ever true in word and in deed, to ner love, yet tne aiexi can man is not true, true neither in sen timont nor in his acting. He is a born flirt, a flirt of the most disorderly kind. He flirts with any and every body bo- fore the eves of his betrothed and be hind her back but woe to her should she repay her lover and her husband in the samo coin. "I am as jealous as a dog. will some great hulking follow doclure without shame, "and should any one flirt with you I would cut his throat." And would he? Yes, if he were a weak, inoffensive mortal, he would; but otherwise, no. With all his jealousies, all his little faults, the k Moxican is a gentleman in the cour teous meaning of the word. But he is jealous of the "gringo," jealous of his fair skin, light hair and blue eves jealous because he knows that his dark featured country-women admire the fair stranger, and for this reason is very careful to guard them against forming any friendship; not that hor parents wonld let her get in so close proximity as to prove dangerous. And what a life ' is that which the Mexican girl leads. She has no aims, no ambition. When she arrives at marriageable age she marries, and then she becomes a slave to her hus band, to hor children and to the house. She attends church once or twice week, and, if vory roligious, goes every duy. She even loses the dosiro to look pretty, even forgets to put powder on her face, and her waist forgets the mnch-nceuod pressure of the corset. In fuct, there is no place for her in the gen1 oral bustle. Mho can emerge again from her retirement when sho has daughters old enough to need her as duenna, liut alas, now she is forgotten. She is bodragglod, dirty and limp, crushed and broken. Her husband is a free man. He ca rouses w ith tho rest of them. He flirts with thayoung girls, und comes home, perhaps, intoxicated and warlike. But she is uncomplaining. He flaunts it in shiny broadcloth, small boots, big col' lars ami big head of hair. She in dirty, old, patched gown, worn-out shoes, ami, perhaps, stockinglcss. There is little of poetry, little of pleasantness, little ol the intercourse that improves and cul tivates in the ordinary Mexican house hold. And the woman is not inferior; she is superior. She it is who will endeavor to make things look cheery when tho aspect is gloomy. Hut will she ever take her place as man's belp meet, as his equal ? ttrant on Exhibition. New York Letter. 1 Speakiug of men worth looking nt, Gen. Grant has been on view in the Academy of Design. Tho occasion was the opening of an art exhibition in aid of the Bartholdi statue of liberty fund This 150-foot woman of bronze noods a pedestal as high as herself to stand on. Frenchmen's contributions are making her, and sho will arrive hore next spring. Americans have been persist ently importuned to provide tho money for completing the base, and this show is one of the means to that end. Hun dreds of rare art objects have been loaned, and Grant was asked to be a living curiosity, long enough to formally open tho exhibition. A fashionable crowd gazed at him interestedly. He lives among us New Yorkers, it is true, but lie docs not ordinarily go labeled, ond his personality is not striking enough to cause general recognition. As ho appeared in the Academy, there was uot a trace of his military training visible, lie was always rather short, and an increase of fat has rounded his shoulders. His hair and beard have be come very gray, and ho wears both trimmed closely. The invitations to the ceremony had enjoined tho gues'sto come in evening dress, but Grant s cos tume had neither civilian nor soldierly fashionableness. His coat was not a swallow-tail, nor even tho double- breasted frock of morning occasions, but one of thoso long-skirted, smooth broadcloth things that inevitably make a man look rural, it sagged in front, because left unbuttoned, and it strained across the back of his nock so that a ridge of his fleshiness bulged over the collar. Ho provided entertainment for eyes only, except to tho few can. that wero within twoyards of the little plat form on which ho stood while making a vory brief speech. His utterance was so low as to bo wholly inaudible to the rest of the assemblage. Paris Pavements. Cor. Nt. Ixmis Ulohe-IVmocrat. Tho paving of tho streets of Paris is like nvervthimr nlsn here nw-nrlr nt art Noisy stone pavements are few. The principal thoroughfares are paved with either wood or asphalt. In tho summer time an army of nion are placed at short intorvnls Diviner thn hnan llm lrnsminn O v '.U tho dust, the chief ingredient of the ob noxious mua, BuixiaiM. As soon as the rains legin the regiment chances arms." and brooms are the ordr of tho day. What dust has by some mira cle escaped the inundations of tho hose and is joyously forming with "the rain, that droadfkl rhemifitl vtntnii.1 an V.'.,I.,lt, prevalent in almost all cities, is rath- icssiy swept into mo gutter and carried away in carts. Just where I have never been able to find out. However, a little does escape the furv of the broom, and that little by the aid of unfeeling cab men, is spread over an iudescribable amount of surface. A 6hrill err of "gar-n-r-r" by tho unfeeling one, a jump from under the horses hells by the victim, and tho belle's snowy skirts, as well as the mirror-like boots" of th self-satisfied dundv metamorphosis. A -High Old Time. irhila.Mi.hia Call. "Mercy on me! Edith, do stop that horrid slang." "Whv. I hove not nsed any slang. You know I never do." lou aid inst now." "Surely von must be mistaken." "I am not, for 'with my own cars I lit-ard you say something just now about "a high old time.' " "Oh, is mat aur i was reiernng to Mrs. Whim's new purchase, an antique clock worth $500." "Id vas beddhor. mine friends, von doa.d feel too big." RICH MEN'S CLOTHES. Vanderbilt, tiould and Field an Dude of Mild Degree. New York Journal. 1 The other day a reporter invited a distinguished haberdasher to give hira some information on the dress vaga ries of his customers. He said : " Wm. H. Vanderbilt, like the mojority of mc.a in civilized communities, wears neck ties, but he sticks to the same scarf a long time His collars, however, are changed every duy. He pays from So to flO each for his shirts, except those for ordinary wear, which, it is said, ho buys very cfieoD, at prices ranging from . . - ,, 1 A' .1 - Do cents to fi. nue aeprecaung me great railway king for patronizing the cheap-shirt trade, we must admire his economy. He never wears a dickey, and his underwear, including half-hose, is silk, with an occasional change to bal briggan by way of variety. In the matter of jewelry Uliam is exceed ingly simple. He would not be ashamed to fasten his culls witn a pair ol un bleached bone collar-buttons. "Very eccentric in his dress is Cyrus vv . Field, xiis outer garments, espe' cially in the winter time, are remarkable for their bad nt. rarticuiarly true is this of his overcoat. He has it finished off with a fur collar. He revels in well- worn gloves. Field's linen is of the finest quality, and he indulges iu gold iituds of phenomenal proportions. His favorite collar is a stand-up all around, and his tie a straight end, which he ad justs very carelessly. Field, if he wished, would make a hrst-class elude, but he lacks stvle about the legs. "Jay Gould dresses with taste and without ostentation. His shirts are well made and fit like a glove. He has a weakness for fancy underwear, but ad heres to the plainest kind of suspend ers. Just at present he affects a pair of white pique braces, which aro very becoming to his stylo of beauty. Jay was the first man to appear in the 'stroct' with the now stylo of scarf called tho 'Teck.' Ho puts on a new one, generally black, every day. lie once remarked that the separable stylo cuff-button had saved twenty years of his life. "itussell Sage is so erratic in his style of dress that it is rather difficult to describe. He dotes on lino goods, especially in fancy handkerchiefs. The fancier they are the better he likes them. I had one woven to his order, bearing a picture representing a bull chasing a bear dressed in a red uniform. I have often had occasion to note the perfection with which Sage fastens his long black tie. "Sidney Dillon's great weakness is socks. He dotes on fancy half-hoso. I always keep a good supply of pink and yellow effects for him." Thoman Want's Troubles. New York Cor. Chicago News. "Th:Nast,"i8in the dumps. The true inwardness of Nast's trouble with George William Curtis, editor of Har per's Weekly, has never come to light, but certain it is that the world's great est cartoonist finds no place for his sketches in the paper his genius miulo famous. His contract with the Harpers is for $10,000 a year for life, and he draws $'2,500 every quarter with unfal tering regularity. I understand that he sends his sketches to Harpers promptly every Monday afternoon, and they aro promptly put in a dark pigeon-hole. Tho Harpers will not use them, nor will they give np the contract, and henco Artist Nast is in a queer position, llo is now acting as secretary of the Mann ltoudoir Car company, with an ollice on Cortlandt street, near Broadway. His friends say ho is unhappy and aging very fast. Funny, isn't it, that a mau with $10,000 a year for lifo should bo unhappy. If some people had tho earth, and it fenced in with barb-wire, they would still be uuhappy. The ((ulckollver Industry. Exchange. Of late years California has supplied more than half of the quicksilver con sumed in the world. Only two coun tries of Europe produce it in sufficient quantities to deserve mention in com mercial report Spam and Austria. The Spanish mines are located near the town of Almaden, province of Manchn, aud yield about four-fifths of the entire production of r.urope, wlnlo the Aus trian mines, located near Idria, and tho minor mines mentioned, produce the other one-fifth. (Quicksilver is carried and shipped in wrought iron flasks of twenty-five pounds, containing seventy-fivo pounds of tho metal. Prices throughout Eu rope are always given in English money, and the quotations invariably refer to the flasks described. Tho consumption of quicksilver in tho world has averaged 133,000 flasks por year. Tho principle uses to which quicksilver is applied are: Meteoro logical and other scientific instruments, chemical preparations; looking- glasses and mirrors. The White House. The White House was first built in 17D2, at a cost of $330,000. It was not occupied until 1800. It was rebuilt in 1818. Its porticos were not finished un til 1829. Altogether, it is computed to have cost, for building, rebuilding and furnishing, about $1,700,000. The whole structure has a frontage of 170 feet and a depth of 08 feet, and its vestibule is 50x40 feet. The garden and park, which encloso the mansion occupy twenty acres. The cabinet room, 40x30 feet, is on the second floor. The White House was modeled after the palace of the duke of Leicester. Uene "Wr or "Dry." Chicago Herald.1 South Carolina has a local option law which applies to incorporate! cities, towns and villatres. When a plnce votes iu favor of prohibition it is said to have gouo "dry,"' and when another votes for license it is said to have gone "wet." More than twice as many towns have gone "dry" as have gone "wet." Kanlly Pleated. Cou rier-Joumal. Washington Irving once told a mother to teach her daughters to bo easily pleased. Since then, judging from the sort of beaux the girls pick out, it would aeem that nearly every moiner s daughter lias been taught to be easily pleased. A Trielt Played by the Impeen ussier. fChicairo Herald. 1 ' "Spotting drinks is an old chapter in the ciperienee book of every saloon " uiil a bar keener of a fashion- . ,r . II' V. 1 n.f . ,1. aulO fiutauilsuuieuK Ull HID UO 111 vrtn thn' lntAut 'rrn.tr nut Ail o-ni torm 'Bnonffincr arirVs iu dead earnest. Aiie luuivmuiu w; invented it ought to have a leaf , medal. The trick is played on ret 1 dealers during tho day and on barktj. ers in saloons during the evenit. hours. A ehan. unusually well dressed t i rm t i l v T will step up to the bar with a quart boltlo of dark green glass and ask for a quart of 'tho best.' After the bottle is filled he'll exclaim: 'I3y Jove I I've forgotten the chink. I'll hand it in to morrow. If the barkeper is soft enough to believe him the soaker, will coolly walk out, never to re turn, liut even if the liquid is poured back into the demijohn the soaker will still have left enough of the ardent to make two good-sized smiles. You see, these fellows keep a fine soft sponge on hand which, if dry, can be rolled so thin that they can put it into anv kitid of bottle they may pick up. As' soon as the liquid fills the bottle it also fills the sponge, and the latter expands according to its size. Of course the soaker will look disappointed if we pour the whisky out again, but then that disappointment is only one of the outfits of the trick. He'll take his bot tle, walk out, and smash it carofnlly on the next curb, picking up the well soaked sponge and suck it dry. I tell you there's method in that." Italy Waut the Kailroad. .St. Louis Globe Democrat. As a military power Italy now stands almost abreast of Germany and France. In the arts of industry her progress has been slow, but it is none the less sure. A gooil illustration of tho change of heart in tho Italian peninsula, since the day of united nationality downed, is af forded by the fuss made over the rumor that tho proposed " air lino " railroad between Rome aud Naples is to be aban doned after all. Tho report has pro duced a bad impression in tho former city, where it is declared that "Signor Depretis will have to pass an ugly half hour in parliament if he continues to retract his promise, oven in part." In Naples the people are evon more stirred up than in Rome, for they have built great hopes on the projected line, which would bring Rome within five hours of Naples, and to some extent make the southern city tho seaport of the northern. Tho prime minister paid a visit to Naples tho other day, and found the town papered with huge cir cus posters that stared him in the face with such inscriptions as this, pur posely put up for his benefit: "No more mystification ; prompt construction of the air-line between Home and Naples, and don't yoa forget it I" The dif ficulty is, however, that the Italian prime minister is no autocrat to con struct neat and costly public works at the word of command, as the Hussion emperor laid out the railway between St. Petersburg and Naples, by drawing a straight line with a ruler between the two places on a map. What Most Impressed a Lady Visitor. Burlington (Vt.) Free Pros. A lady in one of tho flourishing towns of our state not a thousond miles away hod been to New York, and on her return was describing to her hus band the chief features of metropolitan life which hod impressed themselves upon her memory. After going through a long list of thoso things likely to im press country peoplo she suddenly ex claimed: ".But tliere was 'one thing which did me moro good than anything else, becauso it showed the remarkable growth of philanthropio charity in our large citios. Un nearly all the streets, at very frequent intervals, I saw signs over the doors reading : 'Free lunch free lunch.' I could not help thinking. as I walked along, what a blessed work the relief socioties in New York are do ing!" The good lady in her enthu siasm did not notice that her husband had turned aside to straighten out the lamp mat on his desk, nor does she know to this day the true significance of tho metropolitan "free lunch." The l.nrgext Match Factory. Scientific American. At JonkoimiL'. Sweden, is thn ol.lnst ' and largest match factory in the world. It was established 100 vears turn and -- n - i thero aro now to bo seen speeimons of tne matches used at the !eginning of the present centurv. consisti'mr of hiir fagots of wood furnished with a hnndlo ami a tip to uip in a batli o: sulphur. The wood from which the present kind of matches is made, is tnken from tlm adjacent forests, which are divided into nny sections. .very year one section is cut and then replanted with vounir trees. The trees are hewn into planks in tho forest and cut into slivers in tlr.i factory. The boxes are mado of tl T outside of thn trend. Thn fiutoria aiLV on the banks of lakes which are con- i nected with one another by wide canals. Millions of matches in tnrnml nnt i each day. Some idea of where they all go to may oe obtained irora the state ment that there are at least 280,000,000 of matches burned each dav in thn United States, or an average of five maicnes ior eacu person. When Jim. Langtry Vol Angry. Courier-Journal. Mrs. Lanctrv said, at a lirnalrfaat ra. centlv riven her. that in all her mct. . . . - - . , can experiences she never hail nom .. . ': to be really angry but once. W Piavinz in uetroit one mer it, not i i ? . ...j. naoc eeedingly annoyed by the disturbingly ostentatious manner in which a "hide- ' herself tint tlm wholn mmnanv .. ously over-dressed lady m one of the stage boxes devoted her attention to a i png dog in her lap, to the complete ignoring of the rterformnnrn. .Tw. of the close of the second act, and while the whole houso was wrapped in in tense retrard of the sitnatinn nn tha sa wuv stage, tho lady in question suddenly arose aim cneu. in an Bffonizinc voicn : S-S-8-h! Evervbodv be nniet. T.ittla Fido is having a fit'!" And amid the piercing outcries of the owner, an usher yanked Fido out of tho theatre by its tail Longfellow: Love is sunshine; hate is shadow. 1 1 'is IV 1