CHIPQUAW-KAY. Jtamarkabla MnumnUi of I,oiif-I,ot nit latnlllRxat llr. Chlpqunw-Kay was tlio name of a Miami Indian villago on tho banks ot tlia Wabash rivor two hundred years go. Around about it lay the remain of a city much older and of a civiliza tion much higher than that of the Minmis -the dwelling place of a people of whom history ami tradition are aliko llont Huge monumental piles bore mduring testimony to the onturpriae of the unknown race. Venerable treei gruff upon the mounds and their ring of annual growth marked many gen eration! of their antiquity. In the con struction of these mound tlioir builden displayed no mean comprehensiveness of design and no Inconsiderable en gineering skill. The implements left iif these builder are of the itoue ago. 1 hey are all of peaceful character hoes, spades, awl, axes, knives, awi. pipes, beads, etc., symmetrical in iliape and wrought from the hard atone with mature ikill. The absenoa of Instrn mnuU of war lead to the boliof that the piles were built by a royal priest hood in honor of their nod the sun. Two hundred of lhae grunt artificial lioaps stood about the village. North of Chipuuaw-Kay were fifty-two of them, ordered like a city, with streets lending directly to the cardinal points Two hundred year have worked no changes In those piles. Two thousand more will find Ilium as majestic and as placid a we found them yosterday. There is nothing ordinary about those mound. From tliolr buses tlio r tower nearly two hundred feet nboro the sur roundine plain. Tiie sides of their biisns mo slightly grvmter than their height. Within t-oir bosom have been found innumerable relies of the lout race. Three of the mounds ao more majostio than the other, mid on their flat top wi'r", doubtless, Ihs al tars of the priesthood when sacrifice was offered to the god of bounty. To the right and left of these were the ' sepulchral mounds. Their tonihs have been violated, but tiny have yielded no S 'crct save human ' skeletons mid a few piece of round bottomed pottery. Yet other of the mound were de signed for habllutioiis, and upon Iheiu are (lie ruins of walls of Htone, the foundations, ilouM lc-.t. of structures of some architectural f'totensinns. Itut Chipqiiaw-Kay luis o'her claims to Interest Jhan these liionunient of unrecorded time. Hither, In IMS, came the Kreneh voyagers, followed in 1702 hr the m NNionHrie of the erox. with Ih dr doctrine of "peace and good will." Si xty years later the lion stand ard, by right of conquest, courted the breewi above t'le village, In the heart of the town you may seo to d ly where Fort Sa-kvil'lo W111 built, and t t lit) north stood tlio stone wall of l'ort Knox, which gave lis name to tin present o mnty. Iong year ago Chip- piaw-Kay be nine no almost forgotten name, ami llm French ncaipation hn came immortalized In the name of Vin cenncs. When Ihe sword was drawn for thn liberal on of the American colonics the . Old I'ohI." Fort Knot was callo I, became of liiiiiirliin"fl to the battling patriot, nud ionoril (ieorgu Roger Oark was sent to wrest it from En gland. How lie marched his Utile hand around one of the great mounds tint I lie magnilied it to t'ie Itrilish eve and frightened their command ir and his superior force into surrender,! part of history. The mound which thus served the cause of liberty now bears the name of Hunker Hill. Ilcfore the present century was a year old Ihe territory of Indiana.'eouiprUl.ig iiiincmicti area norm or the Oh o pArt I ICULAK WOhK. river ami west of the llickeyn Stitc, Was erected hiiiI Vineemie became it capital. William Henry Harrison was made (inventor, and hi the northern part of the town the curium nmv yi t ace his executive mansion, lis rough hoard w n saw d out bv hand, ami the nails which held ,em together were li mini red lulo rude Hluipti upon a bin -kKniit Ii'm aovil. Iteneiitli tli i fain- ' V room was the powder inuga'.ine placed there, it Is said, by Ihclicn ml forllio purpose of bl iwin'f u i hi f no. lly should the post rail int the him Is of the Indian. In tin cellar maybe seen I lie coll in which pris.iiicr wer kept. As one dashes across fin ,!,. wlilch spins the Wah-wli ,0 mav nomine car wndow two vciicrabht trees standing near the fiver hank 1 l,.i:l .. u i.:.. .. . mo n uuiii ii iew vein- mere were three f them, and beneath their slin le Mineral llarrumi hel l con'erenco wtli tno in. nan Cillers. .r treaties wer. ma te ami here gathered tlio pride ami wisdom of the red nations and of Hie pioneers ot thereut West. a stroll through tlio streets of the o ii town today Is full of rem ndcrs of job urn-, wnen "MnutSt. Lo i ' golden line llew tlio tireem above it. I eenuti Int.) IV. fii.vijj .Yriej. New Industry in Delhi. A new industry has sprung up In Delhi. Some Hit -rpr sing natives are taking advantage of the Oovernment iner oi two anna for ever- snake Miieujo iraue on tun olil fraditiomi iii-n-iuin sei peni WOM'Hp, Tii ,, 0f August is the grunt serpent w.rhlpin' lay. and every Tuesday the pipal tree -i.uq.ro or iim.tou women. Taking advantage of tlio reverence in ui siiaaea, inr;e numher of men nave set t work catching th. s j reptile. j Hi-ii. iaoi) iiieni nuo tilts streets wuure pious iiiiki.km inostab mnd, they announee thai the r are ou their way to claim the reward but ar, iiuito willin. lor a piee or two more, to n- repines ami lo save them selve from the sill of soak inm-.l... which their poverty would otherwise strive lliiou to commit The appeal it jmriuiy succevtiui. .V. j, sur. oilien s t hr stian Temner. . N. J., are -The W KM I'lli.M. ..ff II .. I ! . - iirini;uin, j., are sl nng t'e same sort of work at did the rnsadera of Ohio some years ago. and on a recent Sunday tli 7 made personal v.sits to the opeu saloons. At one the wife of (he proprietor told them what he thought of them n mst emphatic language. At another the proprietor 1 si. ned patiently, accepted their tracts, and asked them to pray for him. and i'i temperance women went much encouraged. -S. J'. tu. awty All About Ui Inlrlrarlrs end illfflrultlw of ii ( uiilng. On the second ttorr of one of our large dry-goo Is housce it a department that (lifters entirely from the others in that mammoth store. Here there U no rush mid bustle; no confusion of many voleci and shuffling of many feet; no crowd that push and tcrani b!e for first chance at tlio bargain counter; no clerks that are flippant, familiar and independent at the tame time. In fact, here are none of those many disagreeable thing which are found in all other departments of all largo dry-goods stores. Kvcry thing It unlet anil aubituod. ihe want are bung with costly pictures and plapics and the counters are covered with rare bric-a brao and a dailing array of fine glassware. The clerk are polite and customer! move around slowly with the hush indicative of the art seeker. The cut and engraved glass at once atiract atlentiun. ihe sun shining in through the western win dow fill the metallio glass with daz iling rainDows. . "You havo never seen the procest of culling glass? asks ' the manager. "Von will bo suprised at the primitive way in which it is done. We cut all our glass right in the building, and if you wdl loiiow me l win tiiow you Hie way It is done. Climbing up two narrow flights of stairs, tlio writer was ushered into a room that very much resembled the country pottery as it exists now in some of the Jcw Kii'Miind Mate. J ho room was a frame strurture that had been placed on the ro'if of the building. l lm sides wi-reof glass, admitting lignt from three sides. A iloien trough containing a mixture looking 1 ko i-and and water were Htatioiicd in front of the windows. IM:5'( rent st ; of w heel run bv machinery revolved above tlio troughs, while lluids dropped 011 the winds from pipe immcalintoly ahovo ai eaen wticet stood n man Willi a lieuvv p'uee of glass in hi hands. "There are sit proecssei for cutting gluss, said the manager, "ihehrst is termed ro ighing. An Iron wheel, on which sand mixed with water drips imitiiiiially, dig out tlio pattern. At theru an only a few lines tri.ucd on the glass whereby to go, this is a very dilli- oult ta-k. All glass cult ng is done by crossing certii n straight lines at cer lain point. If, in glass c itting, t'10 whe.d moves slightly from the line the whole piece of glass Is ruined. Tlio workmen are titer- fore co njicllod to keep their eye on their work all the time. The glas itself is mado in Bac carat, Germany. It is the finest glass made. It is termed metallic because a large purl of it Is silver. It is boujht by the tioiind and is very expensive in tiie bulk. ' It is, therefore, no'ensy task lo hold it free, a these workmen do for hours lit a limn. The second process called smooth ing. The wheel used tor this is mail ' of Scotch ( r.ii.'cth stone. Water runs freely un it as It revolves. It smooths nut all the rough edges on Did in s which have been dug out in the first process. "Alter (his come the different modes of polishing. A wooden wheel and powdered pumice stono am used lirst. these take out the wrinkles on the surface of the class. Then follow bru-h with which pnmicn slonois used. Then a brush and putty powder. Lastly, a buff whu.-l, made of nearly fifty piece in anion iiannei ami rouge. Tlio pieces of flannel are loose, but the machinery causes them to revolve so rapidly, about H.lHio revolutions to the minute, that the wheel seems a hard 11 a board. This hst process not only P'jI''Ihw. but impart a beautiful gloss to the surface of tlio glas. Then it Is linislied and ready lor our counters down-Mail's. There have been very few changes in Ihe art of glass-cutting for centuries. I)ee.t that we now use 1-tea in iit-tcad i f foot-power, we have no advantage over the cutters of two hundred years ago. There are only two innnnfaot- .1... -1. ..'. 1 ... . mini i me niuiru uicill III Tills coon. try. and their elassinif infer'uii-onalitv. Workmen have to serve a longapprcii- uci-suip oeiore nicy master the trade, An expert woikmau ro-ehvs hi"h pay. I, L I . .... 11 e n-ij no.Mi, conuiiing worn nm oiKM-i ineni an 1 iok pale. A great iiiairy .-iwiM ami noiicmians are em ploy id. The cutting of lapidary toppers is tlio most dilllcult work. ii r ijuires mo greatest i'aetness t'ccause there are so many Diamond shaped figures in a small space. cry few can do this work well, iiicre I oi:o old man in this country who is looked up to bv all the other workmen. Tliev say he carries a charm. He is the most expert cutter m lapioary stoppers in the country. Not only does he out them all ivrfeellv but he fcive them a liner polish thai) anybody eUecan. Ho Iso'os dv watched by his follow-workm n, who aiv they have oberved him take something from hia pocket and rub the stopper with it. He lias been dieted large sums for secret, but has always refused to sell it. "There is of course tome smashing I think it is s ifu to say that out of ev ery live pieces, cosiing seven dollar." and .lift v cents each, one is broken Sometimes the broken piece can be cut to advantage, but more frequently it b valueless. The broWm glas is 'often rem: IIOU 10 Ihe lllallllfilrliiivr !, the breakage was due to a flaw in thr glass. This sort of g'as goes through hi nioieaunc process 1 hat Is, in man ulactunng it I put in the oven a cum oer 01 times at traded deerees of tem perature. I Ins harden the g!as. I'mi ai.j a tiaw can he diseovenil before cmtmg. Much morn smashing is done car bsslv bv customers ilown.nt.iiM man ov our workmen. Clerk !. n..ir sh-re, t,Hi. Of course tiie tin 11 has to u.-ar 1 no expense. a iiioreii cui riHss itvm v 1 if color is put on in the same way a liver plate, ami then part of it is cut way. h leaves the blended rt..,.r ..1 color snd 110 clor. The polar star Is iic ui me premesi esic;ns, Manv cus tomers bring ut oi ig nal design which they wish mule. Uiit and some are imooisiljla to i. Maii and h'iprtss. GRAND SIGHTS. rlctorMqu and Iiiipi-el Bcn In lh Itorky Mountains. On descending the range into the lovely San Luis I'ark, tiie mot south cm of the four great parkt of Colorado North, Middle, South and San Luis we pass along the flank, almost, of Sierra liianca, the highost mountain In Colo rado, which boasti forty different peaks ot 14,000 feet altitude and over. Blanca exceed them all, however, by a few feet lake's Peak is one of the forty, but it over-topped by several beside ltianca. The view of the last-named mountain It much finer, however, from the farther side of the park, which is here about forty miles wide by seventy five in length. In looking back at it the eye takes In all of its grand propor tions, and when its cap of perpetual snow, which gives it the name of "White .Mountain," is lighted by the setting tun, it is Indescribably gloriout in its varying tints 01 pearl and ame thyst and pink, deepening into crimson and nurple at the shadows lencthen. On the west side of the park we begin climbing the Comejos range, making neai way siowiv in our ascent lor manv miles, as would seem from our zigzag course. We look back from a slight elevation at the route just traversed, and it looks like a whip-lash just after it has been cracked. Indeed, it Is called the whip-lush." A little farther on we pa-s the same station-house threo times, once on a lower level and twice on a higher, circling around it from the first to the second level. On the way to Lea Ivillo, one passes through tlio "Grand Canyon" of the Arkansas, which begins above Canyon City and extends for a distance of twenty m'lcs, if one count both the canyon proper and the gorge beyond, wtiicn it almost ns n. rrow. tor six or seven miles thc-train seoms to ho sweep ing through a rift In the surface of tle earth, a very narrow,, tort ious rift at that, from which one looks up ut the riuiion of the blue sky aoovc, between haro and mgjeil rock rmin? abruptly lor 11 (iiHtanco 01 over two thousand f. ot on either Hide, with less abrupt mountain wall beyond, towering to a height of threo or four thousand feet A narrow shelf beside the ruslifng tor rent, blasted for alivost the entire dis tance from t'ie rocky walls, sometimes forming a corridor, as it were, with the rocks overhanging, serves as a road bed. JMen hail to be lot down bv ropes irom ahove In many places to drill tlio Holes lor the blasting powder, during the construction of the road, there being no foothold at all and no possible way of descending. Where no human being had ever trod a few years back. the adventurous railroad now boars Us hundreds daily. In one snot the wall Is so precipitous that the whole moun tain sido would have had to bo b'asted Hwnv in m-dertn nint-n u ntiwu.ifrn lf,tn Instead n, longitudinal iron Tirido is swung from iron truss s anchored in tlio rocks above on either side of the sir -am. it is ditiictiit . to imazino a person so stolid that his heart weald not be stirred with awe in traversing this mighty chasm. Cor. ltochtMcr Vnim. TEN O'CLOCK LINES. An Indian War of fixing- Iloundarlet of Grants to Whlt Men. "That's a ten o'clock line." said an old gentleman putting his linger on delicate line on one of the Gram! Pacific maps. "What in creation is a ton o'clock line?" chorused twoyoungcompanions as they traced the line in quostion from near the mouth of the Miami river northwest through Indiana, "It was the boundary of an Indian grant a kind of natural way of survey ing. 1 1 was down with a party once to ratify a treaty by which a tribe agreod to cede somo territory to the whites. It was a small matter, but it was a big occasion with the savages. Every thing was read v. ine surveyor had his compass and folcscope and had mounted thorn on a tripod. The head man of the tnbs came up, looked steadily at the instrument for awhile, grunted, and returned to the circle around the council tire. Not a word was spoken. Soon another Indian got up, walked sedately to tlio instrument, gravely examined, then grunted, and in silencp returned to his place by the firo. This example was followed by half a do.en other bucks. Then they hold a short consultation, and the head man aroso and came over to the white men. 'That what Indian know.' he said. drawing a small circle on the ground with a stick, 'that what white man know,' he continued, ilrawin? a larirer circle around the lirjt. 'Th's what nobody know,' he concluded, point, ng to ail without the last on-clu. 'White mail know that,' pointing to the in struments; 'Indian no know it. Indian know the sun. Him never cheat. Him aiways same. Il;m throw shadow. Indian give white man land one s'du shadow and keep other side.' After a big pow-wow it was decided that a lino drawn in tliodirection of the sun which would cast a shadow from an agreod point at ten o'clock should bo mado the boundary of concession, the white man taking the land on tlio one sido and the Indian keep ng that on the Other. The other boundaries of the concession wore thosu of tho original territory of tho tribe, supplemented by watercourses and other natural obiects, These lines wore frequently used and became know n 11s 'Leu o clock Lues. Uinalta World. LINCOLN'S ALMANAC. Tha Trua In wnlni of a Ktorr Wliloh Ha llrn lold Tim and A Rain Duff Armstrong, the defendant In the celebrated murder trial in which Sir. Lincoln scored a great legal triumph at Heardstown, Is one of the notable charactert at Petersburg. The fatal affray 0 curred at a camp-meeting. Press Mutger became involved , In a uuarrel. and rccoived a beating, from Tho foundations are laid for thr moro large cigar lactones atKnv y oue thousand quarrel, and rccoived a beating, from . cL r , tmj effect of which be died. One of to twfJr " the assailant was sent to the peniten- J nfZ , ,e. lot IilUSTKIAL WuHlJ It Is estimatod that eighteen n,ii Hon pairs of boots and shoes are 1 nually manufactured in prisons. The Connecticut rivor and ii 1.1. uturics furnish power to 2.'2'J8 r,;m which represent 118,026 horse p0WL7 'w thre, ov V. These, will employ oue thousand; onaJ" ,1 , VOi tiary for eight years. Duff was WIRED TO DEATH. ratal very mid make. .V The Canadian Tar-itU :i, 1 claim to have the highest bridge, in tli. wunu. 11 is itsioetabov the ground. COTTAGE DECORATION. now Broken ('rockrry and China-War Can lie .I'tlllied lo Advantage. There is not a-cottage or any other dwelling in which mosaic floors might not bo laid, or in which somo of the walls could not be set to advantage with such work. It is not only orna mental, but it is easily washed, nnd then-fore conducive to cleanliness' nr.d health. A very large .proportion ol wall paper is pnsfd directly over an oiu paper, and even when it is torn away too much generally remains. havu learned by in piiry of several in stances in which persons havo been nit her directly poisoned by the pigment employed In coloring sit ill paper, or in which malaria and ileal h were induced by one coat dccaviiiir over another in a damp room. Nothing of the kin I can imwcuT, ihko oiaee wnen walls are i-unTimi wiin iiu sue or tiles, or Me M 'iiciled. Mosaic work can bo execu ted wherever stone, Portland cemciil and broken crockery can bo obtained. It is to be observed that broken fictile ware has several very great advantages over any other material. In the first p'aee it costs nothing and may be found in everv rubbish heat:, a well as ... I.!.'... '. 1 . mum it me p iv m most kitch-ns. It is more easily hrok-n into pieces 0f nnv requisite sue than stone, or oven ceramic cubes. It has a strong gia-.o, and generally wears as well as the v. ry expensive material of baked clay sold for such wo k. And tinally, it is in an inlinit-j number of shade and tones, sn that for really varied picture making it oilers the greatest inducement to the artist. 1'ur cro -kery or chin t ranges from Sevres to the rudest terra eotia, from saucer like pearl and marble to siag-tria-i winch oun not bo dis imgiiisiied from agate. There is nbso micijr no material jor decorative art work of any kind which offer such vast variety of hue and shades and materia' a crockery mosaic. I may a Id to this that a very curious anil beautiful variety of mosaic work for wails mav be made by setting broken glass, and esp cially" glass or china oeans. in cement. The glitler n f points which they nre- ti'iu eaten ttio ngnt and render the worn v.-ry etlective. 1 have heard tin: as well aserockerv mosaic, objected to as "trashy," and so it is when the an st who make it is not capable ol making anything but trash, hut one who possesses skill or genius does not depend on mere material. 1 have seen such mosaic which was so far from Iwing trashy that it was truly beanti fill. And I venture to predict that we are not far from the time when all the broken crockery or chinawart will be u'.ilied. It Is certain in the interest of all housf keepers to en courage an art which will recoup them for the r losses by breakage. I one lived in a hotel hi America in which the breakage for a single morth amounted 10 three hundred pouuds. Art Jnurual Aci-tdants, bjr Tolei-rinli, Among Ih Itlrd In England. ' Of the orthodox bird, as Sidney Smith called the pheasant, it is in some places a very common victim. I think 1 could pick out one stretch of railway which, at certain seasons of tho year, produces for the surfaceman wiio goes along it in early morning a never-failing supply of wounded and dead birds. On 0110 side of the railway is u long belt of plantation, where tho birds uro turned into after being hand-reared; on tho other sido a rivor, with corn-fields stretching down to it; and it h in the passago from tho covers to the corn fields, when tho grain is ripo or stand ing in stock, that the accidents occur. Partridges also often fall victim to tho wires, ns bIso did the red grouse where the telegraph crossed their native heaths. In more than one instance Unva the wiros been laid underground, where crossing grouse moors, to prevent the o,rus fining tiiemseive; butevnn when crossing these moors in the usual style from pot to post, grouse after a time get lo beware of them, and d-alhs through this cause get fewer and fewer. Ono instance of this pec il'nr ad.ipia t'on of themselves t n -w circum .danees c line vury f ircibly under th.i writer's noli -c. A wire fence was put a -ross a very good grouse moor in t 'umlierland.'iliviiling the fo'l into two allotments, l-'or some time 11 ft or tli s w is don-', dead or dying birds were picked up daily, until it was well kno vii that whoever was liist along the fence was sure of a grouse p'e It was amus inglo s e the different atrateircm em ployed by shepherd and others lo 'et under indictment, and feeling was quite strong atrainst him. He was a son of Jack Armstrong, who had been Lincoln's great crony in early times. Jack was , 1 l . .. I Iff 1. i I I.!- IM . ueau. out "oiu iiannau. ins wuu, ou her affliction, wrote to Mr. Lincoln, who had then boon living in Spring field many years. In reply came prompt instructions to take the case on a change of venue to D 'ardntown, and to rely on him for the defense. In 18.38 the trial occurred. That was a year and a half or so after the trouble at the camp-meeting. Air. Lincoln conducted the ca.se with great care, cross-examin ing the witnesses closely. There were one or two men who claimed to have seen the fight, and they described most minutely all the circumstances. 1 hey said that Armstrong gave the fatal blow, and that he used a slung-shot. Mr. Lincoln pressed them to know how they could testify so positively, and they said that there was nearly a full moon, and that it was as high ns the sun is at Ion o'clock in tbo morning tins moon shining down upon the com Oatants made every movement plain. n hen it came Air. Lincoln s turn to present the defenso, he put into the hands of tlio jury nn almanac, and asked them to see for themselves what kind of 11 night it was. The jurors looked nnd saw that there was no moon at all. Court, lawyers, witness "s, ami 1111 except iiir. L.ineoin were thunderstruck. This evidence was followed by a speech, in which Mr, Lincoln mado the most of the almanac. Tlio prosecution couldn't rally from the impeachment of its witnesses. Arm strong was acquitted. After the trial there was a pood ileal of talk. Tho defendant's friends wore not tho least pu.led, for some of them remembered positively that there was a moon that night. There was a consul tation of old almanacs, and it was found that the general recollection was cortvet: the affray had tak m place on a moon-light night. Then the ttlra tnac which Air. Lincoln had used was in request: it could not bo found. There s ludoubt in the mindsof Peters burg people that Mr. Lincoln's almanac was not genuine. Some hold that it was gotten up for tho occasion. Other think that for the proper almanac Mr. Lincoln substituted ono of the previous year, and that tho error in ditto was overlooked in the confusion caused bv such Htartlinn- (viilnnn. Now and then a warm admirer of Mr. Lincoln lias urged that the lawyer him. self was not aware that he was palming off on the court the wrong almanac. Dull Anii-troiig said to tin writor quite warmly: '-It's all nonsense to talk about Mr. Lincoln having had that almanac mado for the occasion. I re collect he called for an almanac, nnd there was none in the court-room Then he s -nt my cousin Jake out to get ono, and ho went out and got the oook mat was shown to the jury. The almanac was all rig it." "Lincoln made a speech to tho iurv." said Duff", in which he told thorn how ho had held n:e when I was a baliv while mother got bis meals for him. Ho told mother ho wouldn't charge a cent for defending mo, and ho never did. He was a mighty smart man, and a good 0110. loo." AVhile Duff Armstrong lives there will lie one man in Petersburg lo de fend Mr. Lincoln's ' memory upon the almanac episode. I'ticsbuig ( Id.) Cor. it. Louis U otic-I'cmoura'. American luxury, and will taka five thousand bushels of corn in vt spring. It is claimed that tho new Mans llchcr repeating rille, now bain" mno" iifactured for the Austrian arniy'ia tht most pefect perfect rifle ever inynnii It fires forty round a minute. If .b.iys are raised in a wav tn 1. press on them that labor and industry is discreditable, luxury and idle Imh will follow and vice comes as certaia as night succeeds the day. iv. Y. , ami'iier. Two Pittsburgh manufacturlr.. firms have bought land on which ta erect two or three hundred hnn. which their workmen will be enenm.. agjed to purchase on easy payments. fuuourgn uiromc.e. There are 555,855 persons In f.r Britain outside of those having airrleni. tural hold ngs who have from on. fourth of an acre to one thousand aerni Of those 13o,7y6 have from one to live acres, and 148,805 from five to twenty acres. Only GC3 have over ono thnn. sand acres. Tho New Jersey silk industry ! growing raptdly. Plans are comnletit for a now silk mill at Putorson and for several extensions. A number of com panics havo decided to increase their capital stock. In soveral Huron silk confers tho demand is chielly for iiu nr.mi a, wnicu manuia -Hirers do not care to make. N. Y. Herat J. Oil from pine wood is now mnn. fact tired on a considerable scale in tht South. Tho material is subjected to intense heat in soaled retorts, and one cord of it is said to yield fifteen callon. of turp.-nlino, eiglny.gallons of pine, wood oil, fifty bushels of charcoal, 130 gallons of wood vinegar and a ouantitv of inllammable gas and nsphaltum. In one of the Hudson River raili-n.nl shops there is a toothless sleol circular saw thirty-eight inches in diameter, thrce-elghtlis inch thick at the edge, which 1 run nt high snood witfa stream of water pouring ovorit to keep it from crnckinsr. nnd will cut oil' a hnr of railroad iron in a short time. Three thousand enn bo cut before a saw is worn out. The ends cot butter.-d bv use before tho body of the rail, and when sawed the remainder can be used on side Iraeks. Albany Journal. Andrew Carnegie is buildins-on the summit of tho Alloghonies. near Cros son Spr.ngs, a house, or castle, which will cost l,0tM),(KM). Tho entire walls will be built up altogothor of tho un dressed suture stone which' is to he fou-nl on the place, and they are not to show in any place- a single mark of tha chisel or hummer. Mr. Carnegie's or ders are positive on this point, he hav ing expressed a wish to havo as.far as pos-iblo even the moss on the rocks usod in the walls undisturbed. lilit- burgh VuU PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS. H ' CATCHING WORMS. How Some I'onr Nun- Yorier Make an Kii- rimuirh I'nrrrhiln l.lvlni;. "There are q'lite a nttmhor of men in Now York who make a living ut ilong the f -neu without seeming to do catching meal-worms ami selling tliem so. Indeed. I have seen two 1 1 mera meet nt the "Townfoot" nud. after 11 short gossip separate, going in diff,-r-cnt direction and away from the fell, nnd an hour after I have heard nf them meeting about the middl.i of the fence, both intent on dead or wounded birds. While for sn mi time this sl iught -r of grouse w,jnt on, anot'icr fellow put in in appearance, litis time with four lee and made a tra-k by th. hide of the fence to replenish his larder: and Mr. Stoat ha I even the t-meritv to dispute the claim in one instance with the ki-k legged hunter. But the grouse in time got to know the dangers of tho f,;nce, ami now the victims are few. A.L Llif Year Hound. A Nw York physician savs it V danrerouj t go into the water after t hearty meal." And we prvume if hf did ro in after one h wouldn't find it. Ml a 'id crtAer Htptrter. The Oldest Newspapar. The oldest newspaper in the whole wide world is tho himj-rau or "capital sheet," published In Pekin. It lirst appeared a. i. Mil, but came out only at irrogular intervals. Siuoj the Voar 1351. however, it has been' published w ...I l ....I : . 1 . . wiin iii uinioriu sie. ..Now it appears in three editions daily. The iirst, issued early in the mormon- and prinie.i on yellow paper, is called Ihttto-lan (business sheet) and con tains trade prices and all manner of commercial intelligence. The second edition com. s out during the forenoon also printed iiKin yellow paper, is devoted to official announcement. and general new The th rd e lition up. H'.trs late in the afternoon, j.s printed on red paper and bear the name of KO.t-tj! (country sheet,. It list of extracts from the earlier li. tions. and i largely subsciilm.l f.- i- he provinces. The number of conies printed daily varies between thirteen thousand anJ fourteen tlwiin.t HVsf 6'Aore. Seme in Chicago. Two lon-sei- arated friends meet: ' Vh.,po ;. i'..L. Win living, mv dear f.-linw" ..ii- Nn't 1 mi.-." What! Whv. wU. .),. he dr -He isn't dead?" Miool gracious. 1 ou said he Un't living and 1 infer that be is dead." "WulF !.- a-o;it the sum t thing. He sw.Vl tc fcL Louis." S'tc!Hn IiideiUHiiml. 10 o.ir tr ,ue, said the proprietor ot a bird store 1 1 a reporter. "You laugh, but it is a fact. There is a man who has furnMicd m- vmii th-sn worms for the past li vu years. Meptnis way and I II show you how they come to us." Tho reporter followed the b'rd denier into a back r .10111, where 011 a shelf stood a row of snrill tin boxes. The dealer took down a box and opened the lid. 1 he can was half full of small eriistaccous wormsof yellow nnd brown color. They measured about 1111 eighth of nn inch i 11 thickness and an inch and a half in length. "These bo vs." said the propr'etor, "hold about a thousand worms and cost one dollar per box. Most of the 111 ill worms are taught in Ihrt bg grain warehouse cm the river front, in tloui mills and old feed stores. A good man at the busiii'-ss can mako ten dollar ner week. They catch them with thei. hands or use a sieve. A great mam worms are consumed in the course iii a year. Mocking birds and nearly all birds with soft bids nro very part'al to tliem. Besides, they are healthy. It is said that meal-worms are good eat ing nnd taste like shrimp, but I have never tried them." A'. Y. Mail and xjirtss. the t lii-iL" All the Same to Her. "Something to eat?" echoed woman its she faced tho tramp on doorstep: "Yes. if you will earn . "I shall be gl.nl to, ma'am." Well, them's the wood p ie. and I'll bring out the s iw and a. "Kxa tly, ma'am, but perhaps vou'd prefer lo hear me play something on the piano? Keallv, ni;iam, while sa.w ing wimmI d. ps not dUnjrree with me, the piano is more in my line." "O. wi II, come in," she said as she held the door open. "There's so very little difference that we won't stop lo a-guc. Th-rj's the piano, and while Ton j ng'e I'll have tho girl set out a luncheon." Mroit Frte Prtss. , The sponsre fihii-T- at 1 cola. Ha.. ,aa yielded less than one Icvirtnthe uoial amount thi season, ow ng to high and coustaut wiuo The water In Lake Huron has risen eighteon inches during the past year. A poor young man out at the el bows does not fnol like laughing in hia sleeves. Sew, Orleans Pica,ju t- It is safe enough to say that earth quakes originate under the sea. Ni one can craw l under there to find out An exchange says salt is a remarka ble remedial agent. So it is, indeed. It has b -on knowu to even cure a ham. Loire l Courier. An old lady in Ilol'and scrubbed her sitting room floor until she Ml through it into the cellar. Excess in all Ih.ngs is wrong. Wife "Why, aren't you going to wear your dross suit, my dear?" Hus band -".Not.much. Tlio last timo I wore my dress suit at a party a young woman ordered 1110 to bring her a cup of coffee and be quick about it" If. Y. .swn. Charles Mathews, being one even ing in the front of the house nnd seoin agent'einan putt ng on hi coat, r.i parntory to leaving, exclaimed: "I bo pardon, sir, but th ro is till another act." "Whi h is precisely the reason," replied the other, why 1 am going." Husband "You know that pretty Mr. F.'' Wife -"l-'or goodness saku, John, don't talk about that pretty Mr. F. I can't go any where without hear ing her praises sounded, until I am sick to death of the hound of her inline ' Husband "I was only going to tell you of a rumor I heard about li r to-day." Wife -"A minor? O. John, fell nm all about it; that's a good soul." .V. i. SIM. Manager "You have not got a proper appreciation of art, and I can not give you moro than twenty-five dollars a week." Pretty Actress "Hut 1 was getting ono hundred dol lars just after 1 was divorced, you must remember." Manager "Ohf you are th-i actress who was' divorced?" Act-rss-"Ycs." Manager "And eloped with the Fivuch Count? ' Actress "Vei." Manager "Three hundred dollars a ween. "4V. Y. Uraphic. Angry c..cn (who has j 1st dropped a eo n in the hat) "I'm a good mind to thrash you. Why, you're u imposti-r; you're not blind. What do you mean bv having that sign on yon reading: 'Help th ) Wind?' " P,c gar "Ky gum! vour right bosS. Don't bl ame nm. It's tie ole woman's lautt 1011 see, 1 can t read, and she has put de wrong sign on by mistake. I his is my lame day; to-inorrow is my blind day." ni-llits. ' rWerker-"II:io. Harold; I'm sur prised to see you at this hour. I heard you had gone to work." Harold (of-(endeU)-''aw. old chappie, vou-aw -lon t mean that now Werker "In deed, I heard so." HaroM "Well, aw -you didn't believe it did voll,', erker -No; I knew you too w.-ll.-' larold Thank., deah boy, thank! lm - aw- glad the bae slandah w ;eived the tweatraent it deserved." ilamb'cr.