A TropUjr f lb Moody Anglo. One of tlio happiest men who returned tram theOeltvsburg memorlul encamp. went"U C. W. Bishing, of Harvey' Lake, this county. He wai a private in Cant. races comiiany, r my -third Pennsylvania volunteer. Dishing was thot twice nl Gettysburg, hi wound being ugly ones, a uiuiei shuttering an rm and another entering near hi right thigh. Thi occurred near the bloody anele and not fur from the spot on which the reglmeiitul uionunicnt stands. A oon as lo received the wound he set to work to bury hi musket He fell neur t big rock, and, though suffering great nain and bleeding proiuseiy, lie man aired to scoop out enough dirt at the base of the bowlder to idip hi musket into the excavation. Afterward he carefully covered it and wondered whether he would ever see It annu Dishing accompanied the surviving members of hi old regiment, the rifty third Pennsylvania volunteer, to Gettys burg on the occasion of the dedication of their monument. lulo there Bishing, accomimnied by several old comrade, started out to look for the musket he hud buried twenty-six year before. The bloody angle was easily fouud. and he soon distinguished the huge bowlder at whose buso he had fallen and where he had hidden the gun. It took but few moment to dig the eurth up, when, to hi joy, lie struck the old musket and quickly resurrected it. It hud the ap pearance of Kip Van Winkle's fowling piece. The stock hud fallen apart, but wus still in a good state of preservation. Tlio barrel wus hound about with a thick coat of rust, and tlio lock and other por tions were in the same condition. Hut Dishing lifted the old musket tenderly, and, as the'recollections of the past filled his mind, he kissed it with the enthusi asm of a father who has found a long lost child. ISUhing brought the musket to Wilkesbarre thi afternoon, lie says ho is poor, hut no money will buy the musket. ilkesuarre (ra.) Cor. New York Sun. A Queer Sect of Turks. Among the lost batch of Syrians arriv ing ut Custla Garden were three Druses. Two were farmers and the third wus a shoemaker. They went from Castle Gar den to Baltimore. These three men are the only Druses who have ever route to this country. An isolated and piculi.a race, the Druses huve lived for generations near Mount Lebanon. Their total number is about 40,000. Ilukem, the third Fatimite ca liph, is claimed by them a their found er. They honor him as a divine being, and faithfully observe the curious re ligious rites which he established. They are divided into two classes the elect and the ignorant. The elect are the high priests, and the ignorant are those who are too young and inexpert- enced to be initiated into tlio mysteries of their religion. The high priests guard the mysteries of their faith zealously, and tolerate neither Hebrews nor Chris tians. The ignorant are fur less conserva tive, and frequently mingle socially with believers in their creeds. The elect Druse believe that Jesus Christ was merely an ordinary prophet, and that ilukem was really God, mani fested in the tlesli. They are conlldent, too, that the number of orthodox Druses can never decrease or increase, Tlio three Druses in thi country are fine looking men, and are evidently pos sessed of unusual intelligence. New York Herald A llunlio Icon. Mrs. George Kennan, the wife of the Si berian traveler, is the possessor of a genu ine Russian icon. The Russian craze was epidemic in unusually severe form lost winter, and the fur dealer are import ing Russian skins, and modistes are getting ready to make much of Russian gowns. The modern young woman thinks Iter den incomplete without an icon, but as there are not for sale in this country a dozen of these images which ever saw the land of the czar it may be guessed that Mrs. Kennnn's specimen, w hich the explorer of Siberian prisons picked up at the Nijnl Novgorod fair, has a better authenticated history than most before which priedieus are placed and brass lamps kept burning. Some hard wood, presumably oak, is the ma terial, but like all Russian work it is covered so profusely with white paint and gilding as to make close examina tion next to impossible. The features are those of some saint of the Greek church, and tho figure has brawny chest and shoulders which fall off into an in determinate block, the arms, hand and all but the upper part of the body being represented with a rude conventionality that has not altered by so much as a line in the hand of centuries of carvers, as covered by a gold tinsel screen. Much of Mrs. Kennan's table service is the work of Russian silversmiths and is gilded and embellished with old Russian proverbs. Philadelphia Times. Clfu to the Samoana. In connection with the distribution of rewards to the followers of Mataafa, the Sainoan correspondent of a Sydney pa per write: ' The American congress having voted $5,000 in recognition of the generous efforts of the Samoans to save life during hurricane, the money was received here last mail by the United SUtes consul, $1,000 in gold watches and presents, and $4,000 In gold. After a careful consideration of the claims of the chief and the men assisting, the money and presents were distributed on the lth.( Each of the high chiefs re ceived a gold watch, and Mataafa one of each of the other articles distributed, which were clocks, barometers, ther mometers, etc. A good deal of amuse ment was caused by the efforts of the chiefs to understand the use of the lat ter articles. One of them to whose lot a large wall barometer had fallen listened attentively to the careful, desiription of its virtues, given by an old sea dog pres ent, and said at last he thoroughly un derstood all about it 'Very flue thing.' said he; 'but I want the key to wind it ud .' This timely distribution of money will go far to allay the distress among Mutaafa's follower, for food ha been very scarce lately, also the wherewith to purchase it." London Tablet Want Volapuk l tho Boston Sehoula. A petition was received by the schoo. board from the Volapuk club requestin? permission to use a room in one of the school building of the city proper tor the purpose of teaching Volapuk. in club offers to furnish teachers free or charge for such pupil as shall attenu, with the unden.Und.ng that themlm. of the school shall be under tbe "Pf r vision of the school committee. Riving the club the permission ed ioi was assigned to the next meeung.--ton Record. THE TEMPLE ROBBERY. Mvaterlou nUappearauc or a large Do pmlt or Mints T feature. It Is by no mean surprising that the strange case or the now famous Tirupati Temple treasure should have excited such an exiruordiimrv feeling of indiir nation as it upear to have done among the Hindoo population of India. Tirupati is the Mecca of llindoostun if, indeed, the comparison is at all allowable, seeinir that the temple which has just been so grossly denied wa erected, in the first instance, close uioii 5,000 year ago. The trial In connection with tho robberv of tho Tirupati treasure is probably the most remarkable which has ever coiuc before a British court in India. The sacred temple stands on the Tirumulul range, some 2.000 feet above sea level, and commands a tract of about 100 squure miles, tho whole of which, up till quite a recent eriod, w as regarded, iu the strictest aeiiM!, as holy ground, no body but a Hindoo Mug allowed to as cend the ghauts. Even at the present time the collector and the superintendent of police are the only Europeans whom the government permit to invade the sacred territory, excepting, of course, on special occa sions, such as that which arose the other day, when the services of i civil engineer were required within the precincts of tho temple, to siiiH-rintcnd tlio excavations. The temple itself has, in reality, never been entered by a white man, and all its available entrances are jealously guard ed by armed men, who have instructions tuastrike down, and, if necessary, to kill any unauthorized person who attempts to invade, the sauctunrv. The sacred edifice is inclosed by three stono walls, of which the outer one is twenty-three feet in height. From the devotee's point of view the sacrednessof the place is centered in a great flagstaff, which penetrate from floor to roof, and is 07 feet high, 3 feet ill diameter at the base and 1.1 inches at the summit The stuff is incased in copper overlaid with gold, and set in a slab of granite nearly three feet in thickness. In the immedi ate neighborhood of the flagstaff the image of the god is preserved, while the stuff itself is uctually supposed to bo the abode of the temple god of its "mantric essence." Some seventeen years since, it seems, certain coin treasure, valued roughly at two lac of rupees, was discovered in the temple, and was duly handed over to the mahunt as manager and trustee of the edifice. In 1880 tho Mahunt Dhur ma Doss died, and was succeeded by Sir Hathiramjee Muttatu Bughavan Doss Jee. The new mahunt appears to huve discharged his sacred and responsible functions to the satisfaction of every body concerned, and in 1877 it was re solved to replace the old dwjastumhum, or sacred flagstaff, by a new one. Be fore the work was completed the idea appear to have suggested itself to the mahunt to bury the treasure the two lacs of rupees to which he had succeeded under the foot of the flagstaff. This wus accordingly done, the proposition having met with general approval from the adherents of the temple. The treas ure was placed in six copper vessels, the covers of which were duly sealed up, and they were then buried in the receptacle prepared for them. Now it is found that the gold has all been removed from them, and copcr coins substituted. Four temple servants by name Nara-simha-Kiisitl, Gopalaro and Huribhnjun were, in 1887, intrusted, after being duly sanctified by divers mysterious rites and ceremonies, with the burial of the treasure pots, and a fact that ap pear to interest the police and others a eood deal at present is that two or mem, Kusal and Huribhajan, are now each worth a lac of rupees, although the whole four were discharged some time ago, and none of them are known to have what is sternly known as lawtui visible menus of support." On the other hand, an astonishingly clear looking case made out against the muhunt himself, who, it is asserted, allowed liis cupidity to overcome the scruples of his sacred calling, and "collared the swag himself. The question as to who has really a uj.ro- nriated the treasure seems a diiiicuitone, as far us the inquiry has proceeded, to determine, and it is possible that tho af fair may never be satisfactorily cleared "P Probablv tlio most notable leature in connection with the affair from a Hin doo point of view, at all events is the neculiarlv apathetic demeanor or me Tirupati god, who should have been deeply interested in the proceedings. The "mantric essence," which lias exer cised such an otnniotent power over the Hindoos for centuries past, appears to have lain dormant while the temple was defiled and the mean trick of substitut ing a few hundred rupees worth of cop per money lor two lacs worm or goiu coinage was dope right under the pillar of the Tirupati sanctum sanctorum. Colonies and India. Lore and Law. When two fellows are in love with the tame girl, and one of them happen to boa postmaster, wnai a uig uunun;c tho latter has over his rival! A Maine postmaster recently found himself in this situation and made the best of Ids opportunity-or the worst, just as you may Hunt, ine k"' " ucw through the postofflce. The seller of stamps thought all was not right, and upon investigation uiow. .. - iii the paper was a letter written to his I r;unate rival The postmaster reported the rase and the girl was fined $10. The line was subsequently remitted. And now the query is, doesn't the postmaster wish he hadn't done it'-Lewiston Jour nal. Eating Soup and Salad. In the matter of eating soup many nersons are at fault The spoon should not be shoved into the mouth, but the liquid ought to be sipped from the sido quietly and without any sound what ever. 'j',e mincing of salad into small bite is not to be tolerated. Lettuce should never be cut. although the co operation of the knife is needed to as sist in rolling the leaves around the fork, in order to convey them success fully to the expectant mouth. Jen- ness-Miller Magazine. A Wonderful A gala. Pliny, a well known writer about the time of Clirist, mentions Laving seen an agate, the hues and markings of which formed a perfect picture of Apol lo and the Nine Muses. Pliny say that little children recognized it on sight In thi wonderful natural pict ure, as well as in artificial drawings, Apollo was represented seated in the midst of the tnuiA with harp ia Land. St Louis Republic AN AMAII VIOLIN. Ohm Sold for .1.1, Now lha Rum of II,- OOO U OflVml for II. Mr. Frank B-ll, a well known young man of thi city, has in hi possession a violw nearly three hundred years old, and which is believed on good authority to tie a genuine Amati. A Unit three years ago Mrs. Dell, who is a widow, and her family went to live in Richmond. Her son Frank went to one of the public school of that city, and at home took lessons on the violin from a local teach er, a German musician, Professor Teiloe. As the lad progressed in his study he grew dissalialied with his fiddle and de cided to buy a better one. Talking it over with a schoolfellow, young James, that boy bethought him of an old fiddle at home and offered to sell it to Frank. This was the famous Amati. The boy knew but little of the history of the fiddle, but when it was fitted with strings and keys the wonderful tones which the German professor evolved from it decided him that it was an ex traordinary insx'rument, and he sold it to young Bell for what seemed to him at a great llgure $33. By Professor Teiloe's advice the fiddle was sent to New York to a firm w ho make a spe cialty of repairs. In cleaning the inside of the violin they discovered a scrap of paper, yellow with age, on which was given in Italian the exact record of this Cremona. "Do you know what you have got?" the New York firm wrote, and when the instrument had been thoroughly refitted and restrung the musical cople iu New York went crazy about it, and offers ranging from $100 up to $1,300 were made for it. On its merits as a violin before return ing it to Richmond, Professor White, of New York, and the late Professor Beuf fette, of Washington, both well known artists, gave a recital to a party of seventy or eighty musicians, in which the Cre mona was tested for nearly four hours. The old violin discoursed to the musi cians iu tones mellowed by two and a half centuries of age. Amid plaudits they named it the "King Amati." Then canio offer after offer, and the fume of "The King Auiuti" crossed the ocean and tho virtuosi heard of it Sig nor Spighemie, of Rome, offered $3,000 for the violin, and after his death his son, who won celebrity as a violinist, made the offer $10,000. The latest bid mailo for the fiddle is by Wadsworth & Co., London, dealers in antiques and cu riosities, who have the refusal at $15,000. Montgomery (Ala.) Special Mystery Suited and ratrimoujr Won, Over thirty-three years ago Washing ton Tucker, then a resident of this city, lost his wife, who left him two very young daughters. Soon after he myste riously disappeared, and it was com monly believed that he wus murdered. The girls grew up to womanhood and were married. Last full a letter strangely cume into the possession of Mr. P, W. Armstrong, husband of ono of the girls, which 8Kke of the disappearance of a man in Edgar county, Ills., fully twenty-five ycarsago. The letter further said the man had left a great deal of property. Mr. Armstrong engaged a detective, who went to the county and discovered that the man was the missing Washington Tucker. He had come to that section, married, and lost his second wife, by whom he had five children. He then married again. About a year after this murriage he dis appeared. A year later, in clearing new ground, the remains of a man were found, which, by some fragments of clothing, were identified as Washington Tucker. There were five heirs by the second marriage, who were in jiossession of the property by inheritance. Suit wus brought, which resulted fa vorably for tho Columbus heirs, who will receive their patrimony. Columbus (O.) Cor. Cleveland Leader. Ilottled Chlrkeu. A resident of Marion street, Charles town, is a great fancier of fowl. A day or two ago, when he turned out hi lust brood to scratch for themsclves,.one of the chick ran across a pickle bottle and squeezed itself through the neck with some difficulty, and could not get out again. When morning came the old hail missed her chick and went in search of it Having found jt, and not being able to extricate it from iu imprisonment, she flew around like mad. and finally be came so violent that her owner came from his breakfast table to learn the cause. The old hen was then rolling the bottle over and over with her feet In breaking the bottle the chicken's throat was badly cut The wound was sewed up and the chick is now able to grub for itself, although its neck is still done up with a white rag. Boston Herald. A Swindled Emigrant. An old German peasant arrived at Castle Garden one day last week whose errw.ripncA la an exauioleof how foreign ers are duped by tales of American wealth. Ho had been told by an emi gration agent that gold was so plenty in this country that the people gave golden trinkets to the children to play with, and trimmed the carriages, buildings and street lamps with golden ornaments. He accordingly sold his little place, ana efrr hnvinir ticket for Nsw York. spent the remainder of his money, with the exception or a rew francs, in givmg hi neighbors a banquet On his arrival here he had iust seven francs left The old man was deplorably ignorant, but when it dawned on his mind now ne nad been duped, he wept like a child, lit will be sent back. New York News. Carious Retail of Cigarette Smoking. Two vouns men of our town addicted to the constant smoking of cigarettes are singularly affected, not so mucn in minu a n hod. The are becoming snotted all over their bodies, giving them the appearance of leopards, ner minus, ihnncrh now annarentlv sound, are in im minent danger, for their nervous system are so affected that neither of them can sleep without smoking several of these abominable cigarettes after retiriug.- Harrodsbure (Kf .) Marines and uoinm. Ta Oulnl.ine About Ancient Clark Brown exhumed at Fish's point, on the Upper Mystic road, the other day, what are believed by some persons to be relics of the first American man, ante dating, possibly, the age of mound build ing. There were parts of a human skele ton that crumbled at the touch, two rough copper vessels, mostly corroded, a smoothly rounded pestle and ts-o pecu liar! ehnrrftl etas bottles with crooked necks. Skeptics, howevesj profess to think that the things oeiongea to a pre historic apothecary that was swallowed mi in an earthquake. Mr. Brown may submit them to the inspection of an an tiquarian. Stouingtou Telegram. RESURRECTING OLD WRECKS. periihitnr Kalalng Hulks of Mi I pa Sunk oa Ilia ratal Toast of Jutland. There is erhaps no const known to navigators of the present day more dan gerous than that of Jutland. More ships have been lost on that little treacherous stretch than on any other in tho world, not excepting foggy Sable Island. The w hole coast is strewn with wrecks. The bottom of tho sea off tho coast is covered with thn decaying carcasses of hardy vessels, blown to their destruction by hostile gales. The Dane are a thrifty set of people, and, on the principle that it is indeed an ill wind that blows no one any good, have gone to work to reclaim the major ity of these old craft. Many seculator arc in tho scheme, and ure now engaged iu raising the old wrecks and recovering their curgoes and machinery. The (list thing w as to purchase the old wrecks and the privilege of raising and selling them. The owners were found without great dilliculty, and were only too glad to get anything for tho wrecks. Expe rienced divers were engaged and the work begun several months ago. Twenty-one years ago tho Russian frigate Alexander Novsky stranded off Jut land. She had a cargoof 20,000 pounds of bras. Several years after she went down the greater part of this cargo was recovered. Tho frigate was one of the first wrecks to be bought and examined by the speculators. She wus found to be free in twenty feet of water. Uer ma chinery is in a fuir stato of preservation, and tho old Russian will before many months sec the surface of the ocean. The machinery, if unlit for tho ships of the present date, is still tit for the market If the speculators find it unprofitable to rebuild tho ship they will still be able to sell her at a good profit Two of the other ships purchased for resurrection are the Britishers Helen and Westdale. Tho Helen was sunk years ago. She carried a cargo of copper, none of which ha ever been recovered, and all of which Is now in a very good condition, cousid ing tho rears it has been in the water. Divers who recently went down to her found her free and her machinery in good condition. The ship will be raised and sold. The Westdale went to the bottom on Dec. 24, 1888. off Thornsmindo. She car ried 3,000 tons of pig iron in her hold. The simulators have recovered all of this and will also recover the ships ma chinery, fittings and trappings. Other wrecks are being negotiated for and will undoubtedly lie recovered, with their curgoes and machinery. New York ship ping men think that this would be a good way to rid our coast and waters of the many dafferous derelicts which are a menace to safety at sea. New York Eveninp Sim Earning Ilia Cnllrge t'miree. Speaking of snobbishness, the Listener It glad to have occasion to note a case of old fashioned manly absence of that unpleasant reality Spending Sunday recently with a friend in a very delight ful summer resort not far away, where good many pleasant cottages have been built on a cliff commanding a fine view of the summer sea, the Listener happen ed to bo sitting on the veranda with his friend as a milkman's wagon drew up in the street The milkman, a sturdy young fellow, of pleasant face, dismounted, rang a bell by way of warning to the maids of the vicinity to get their pitchers ready, and then started around with his cans and his pint measure. A he passed around to the back door of the cottage, the Listener's friend snjutcd him as one gentleman salute another. And when the milkman had gone the other said: "That young man is a member of the class of '00 at Harvard college." "Indeed?" "Yea He Is carrying himself through entirely by his own exertions, and lie takes this way of helping himself out I dare say ho makes enough money selling milk at a good figure to the people here In the summer time to pay the greater part of his expenses for the remainder of the year at Cambridge." "Does he water his milk?" "Not perceptibly. It is very good milk, and I have no doubt he Is as honest as the business allows." There was a young man In the house who belongs to the class below the milk man's in college, and he testified to the excellent standing of the young man at Harvard. Such an Incident Is one of a good many which go to prove that Harvard men are by no means all idle swells. Perhaps there is not nearly so large a proportion of students at Harvard who earn money in the summertime by table waiting at the mountain and seaside resorts as at Dartmouth or Amherst, but there are certainly a good many men there who earn every cent of their college expenses Boston Transcript A Live Rattlesnake In a Depot. A colored waiter In the new Central Railroad depot restaurant in Jersey City saw a rattlesnake crawling along the floor near a party of ladies. He yelled "Snakes!" and the ladies ran out into the car shed screaming. The waiter bad an armful of dishes. As the snake was heading for him he dropped the dishes and ram Two men who had been eating at the lunch counter followed him. One of the ladies who had run out told John Van Pelt, a conductor, about the snake. Van Pelt got a stick and a friend of his got another, and they went into the res taurant Half a dozen waiters, a cook and three passengers were sitting on the lunch counter. They were treed The snake was crawling toward the door, shaking iu rattle savagely. Van Pelt and his friend made a combined attack. Van Pelt's stick was pointed, and he speared the snake through the neck, pin ning it to the floor. The other man beat the reptile to death. Then the waiter and cook and passengers came down from the counter. The snake was about two feet long. It had four rattles. How it got into the depot is a mystery. Pos sibly it had been shipped as freight, and had in some way escaped from confine mentNew York Sun. A Lad' Idea. Mrs. Charles Carleton Coffin has sent to the war deptrtment a new design for the forty-two stars in the flag. It has thirteen of tin stars made into a six cornered star fcr the center to symbolize the thirteen original states. The rest of the stars are to I arranged ataut thi in straight rows The device is much ad mired by army cfllcers who Lav seen it New York Htme Journal ( The manuscript cf Barns poem, "The Whistle," bas recently been purchased for 283 by Lord Kcaeberj. THE SWEET CLOVER. A Remarkable Growth That I lha Delight ul fouiwll 11 1 u (ft. No one know jusi how or where It came from n why it came, but a snowy and sweet breathed Intruder has come into the city to dispute with the lordly sunflower his lonn and undisputed title of milliliter sovereignty to all the vacant lots and blocks in Council Bluffs, Iowa And the mock little blossoms on the sum mils of the sweet clover plant are look ing Umiii the swift and certain destruc tion of l he pioneer sunflower Over one third of the Uutoms, where a year ago nothing but tlio gigantic resinous ween) turned its black and yellow face to the sun, and where it grew in such luxury that even the noxious cockle burr was choked out of existence, the fragrant tweet clover has appeared and holds un disputed dominion over every other green thing. Over hundreds of vacant lots in the new additions the tiresome yellow has given place to the dark, rich foliage and fragrant perpetually blooming sweet clover. Local botanists who have examined the new plain with a good deal of in terest and cure say that it Is positively a new sMH'ies, produced by some unknown and accidental cross, and that its vigor and spreading proclivities are the most wonderful features of its nature. The old fashioned sweet clover wus a frail and ghostly plant, that loved the friend ly shade of the groves and the longest moonlight summer nights, a character istic w hich made it a proper love em blem, but this new and thrifty product of Council Bluffs spurns the protection of the trees anil goes out boldly iu the field and meets and conquer the sun loving sunflower in his chosen grounds Asa foliage plant It is perhaps one of the most remarkuhlo in existence for its lux uriance. In ninny respects it resembles the alalfa clover, but it is stronger, thriftier, and of much more rapid growth than that remarkable plant that furnishes three crops of hay a year in western territories. It grows to the height of four or five feet, with a dense leafy foliage and a perfect brush of sweet scented blossoms. The leaf I small and juicy, of a rich dark green, very much resembling the red clover. It is so new and its habits so little understood that it is not known what its value may be as a forage plant for stock. In its present rank character stock will not eat it, but, tamed by re peated clipping and cultivation, it may become ono of tho most valuable plants to the stockmen and farmers. But whether it has any value or not Iu the development of beef and horseflesh, it is of inestimable worth to the people of Council Bluffs as a swift destroyer and fragrant substitute for the ubiquitous sunflower, that lias furnished provoca tion for so many sad reflections upon the city, notwithstanding enthusiastic ws thetcs have sought to popularize the meek yellow crowned weed by puinting it on panels and wearing it on their bo soms. It is a lovely and lovnhlo plant, so sociable that It will come right up to your door and crowd it white head into your windows, and so determined upon having the company of its fellow that it makes a covenant with the soil that where one plant grows this year thousands must grow next. A year ago there was perhaps not enough of the plant in the entire city to cover half an acre; now there are hundreds of acres densely cov ered with it. The odor from the acres of white flowers fills the air, and after a midsummer shower the peculiar and delicate fragrance Is indescribable, and as sweet as the breath of poris. Omaha Bee. A Hlg Steamer's Twin Screw. When Capt Watkins, of the City of Paris, left Queenstown on tho 2.th of last month and started on a course fifty nine miles shorter than his famous run shorter because he ran northward where the world grows smaller and came down over the shoulder of "the great globe we inherit," taking any possible chance there might be of fogs and ice In cross ing the banks of Newfoundland at this season the engines were put at full peed, and for something over four duyt they were driven at the average rate of ninety revolutions of the scrows per minute. There was a variation from eighty-six to ninety-two revolutions. When the furnace were opened to be cleaned the intensity of the steam would be diminished for a few minute and the speed of tlio screws reduced to eighty six turns in the minute. It will be noted that the average speed wa three revo lutions in two seconds, and the screws are twenty feet in diameter, It is aston ishing that this velocity can be main tained duy and night without a second's waiting and avoid developing excessive and crippling heat The fact that thirty men are employed to pour oil upon the bearings and all parts where the friction Is severe will perhaps account in part for the phenom ena, but certainly ouly the greatest per fection of material, and the most deli cate adaptation of one part to the other, could provide for such a strain without disaster. I doubt whether so startling a test of integrity and absolute exactitude in manufacture can be found in any other machinery. During the late run of the City of Paris thn wind was so strong from the north one afternoon as to give the ship a decided lift, elevating the larboard screw so that at each turn the blades threw shower of spray with a dazzling rush far behind the vessel. There are four blades in the screw, re volving three times in two seconds so there were six white surges per second dashed to the winds, and a fine reminder of the snowy rapids of Niagara. M, HaUtead ' "On the Bounding Billowa" The Cotton Worms. That one drug house in Vickshurg should receive orders for fifteen tons, or 80,000 pounds, of paris green in one day demonstrate the extent of the appre hension felt by cotton planters concern ing the cotton worms In the large area of country tributary to or trading with that city. With the cotton worms ap parently so formidable in their second generation, the third generation, which form a vast increase over it progeni tors, may do very serious damage. It ia extremely unfortunate, if it be true, that the available supply of pari green has been already exhausted. It is likely that far more than the amount already used will be needed. Where these pests are unchecked by poison, in their third gen eration, they have been known to rav age cotton fields and leave the stalks as bare of foliage in the hitter part of Au gust and September as they are in early February before being pulled up and burned, preparatory to the planting of a new crop. New Orleans Times-Democrat LITTLE MAIDS A3 COOKS. Hrhnolglrla Tmtht In Horn Their Finger In a Tralnln ( lsa. A group of bright eyed, pink cheeked cirls camo tripping down tho steps of the Kilward ShipM-n aHiool on Friday a few minute before noon They wereof assorted sizes mid styles of U-nuly, but their nges nil clustered closely aliout sweet rixUHMi. There was ono little flaxen haired .Miss whose lisp ami mien lctokcncd that she had hut recently en tered her tiH'iis, and close behind her a tall, diguilliil maid of dusky hue, who looked ns if she would be eighteen some of these days. These cro the extremes Fifteen years may hsvo mailo a fair average. Tho absence of tho usual bulky bs-s of books, and the character of tho girl ish chatter, which was all about butter and burns hikI blisters, instead of prep osition anil logarithms, evinced that thi wus no ordinary bevy of school girls. There were twenty of them, all told, and they had been to cooking school. The quantity of edible turned out by these two score fairy finger during the process of (ho first lesson would scarcely tulllco to satisfy the craving of a lusty apK'tite; but then Rome wa not built In a day; neither can un chilxiruto menu be concocted in un hour. A crockful of crouton or sippets and a faultlessly baked potato were tho only tangiblo re sults of yesterday morning's practice. Several little maids, however, treasured up a precious little cut or a glistening burn ns evldonco of hard work, and all had their craniums just chock full of knowletlgo as to the best ways and means to run a kitchen. "IIousckooier No. 7, 1 appoint you to take care of tho stove for this morning. No, 11, you must look after tho sink, and you, No. 4, will bo iu general chnrgo of the room." These were Miss Stone' words as she called the class to order, She wore a tiny cap of soft white lace and a wide spreading apron, and moved and talked with a grace and case that would Invest tho meanest kitchen with the diguity of a drawing room. The somewhat unpoelical task of fire-building was the first duty of the morning, and into this work the teacher entered with such test and understanding that the "little maids in school" who looked on and learned thought it great fun, and just as easy as flirting. After a few moments' instruction they knew all about removing the ashes, arranging the kindling, applying the match and start ing a blaze, all w ithout a drop of kero sene or begrimed lingers. The big, brightly polished range stood in (lie corner of tho room; the spick-and-span sink, surmounted by a row of dip per and dishpan, stood opposite, and a far end, apportioned off to serve as the laundry, was set forth with boiler, clothes horse and tho other necessary accoutre ments. Along the center of the room were ranged the five tables which repre sented the scenes of maneuvers of the twenty cooks. These were bedecked with spoons, knives, forks, plates, chop ping boards and scrubbing brushes, and every article, a paragon of perfection. Euch pupil was furnished with a seat at table, and after work was over each wus required to polish her resective corner with soapsuds and scrubbing brush until it dazzled. Against the cast wall stood a big cup board, shiny and crochety in its newness, provided with Innumerable nooks and crannies, each devoted to its particular utensil. "A plnce for everything, and everything in its place," suggested Miss Stone, as she pointed out to her group of open mouthed learners the way of the Dover egg benter and the wherefore of the glass lemon squeezer, "The rolling pins must bo piled right here, the cullen der bung just there and the dish towels placed far back in the right hnuJ corner of the third drawer from the top, on the left hand sido, between the tea cloths and the dusters," she went on. "We put the matches In this covered crock so the rat won't nibble them and set tho house on lire. The bread we must stow away In a tin box for fear It should grow stale. We must always keep the butter well covered, a it absorbs strange tastes so easily," and so on through the whole cat egory of kitchen ethics. Then the little maid were set to work cleaning potatoes. Of course they KiNed their knives aloft for the purpose, and of course Miss Stono gently but firmly bade them to drop them instantly. The best authorities on cuisine never pare potatoes nowadays; they scrub them, Each girl was supplied with a small brush, which she applied to the earth apple's cuticle with such vigor that it was soon as white as her own fingers. Then housekeeper No. 8 was bidden to place the potatoes in the stove for bak ing. "Ouch!" she cried, as she lifted the oven door and ran back in dismay. Housekeeper No. 7 was delegated to try. "Oo, ow, owl" wo the result of hor first trial, as she hugged a tender little en gagement finger and fled iu consterna tion, The other girls ouly laughed and Miss Stone flew to the rescua Beneath her "open sesame" the door started open likeadream. "You'll learn after awhile," the remarked smilingly. And the burned maidens sighed and said they hoped so, and once more the chorus giggled. Philadelphia Inquirer. A Mouater Smokeataek. The monster chimney of the new Fall River Iron Works mill, the largest in America and the fifth largest in the world, was completed recently. It is 250 feet above the ground. Tho bottom of the foundation 1 seven feet below tide water and sixteen feet below the ground, making the total height of the chimney 300 feet The base is square for a dis tance of about thirteen feet from the ground, then tapers up gradually for about eight feet, and from that up the chimney is cylindrical In form. The diameter at the base is thirty feet, at the narrowest part it is fifteen feet Thi flue has a uniform diameter of eleven feet The wall at the bottom are thirty two Inches thick and in thethinneat part twelve inches. It is built of brick above the foundation, the number used being 1.700.000. N. Y. Telegram. A Weatera Inveutor. Edgar F. Lincoln, of Topoia, Kan., has taken out more patent during th last two years than any man In the coun try. Hi invention cover all fields, and be has patented almost everything, from an improved electrio light to a celluloid toothpick. Like a great many inventors be finds it difficult to make money out of his cleverness. Other men reap the profit of his brain effort His latest de sign is a toboggan brake. It enables a toboggan to stop in the middle of the steepest incline instantly if any obstruc tion suddenly appears on the chute. New York Telegram. ATTACKED BY A BEAR. 4 Kenlm-klsn Una a llanl Time with a lt tioite IVIhl. Frederick Seifried,Jr.,tho pork butcher tt Thirty-1, fib nud Bank streets, is the owner of two black Is-ars in w hich he lakes great pride, Tho animals are kept I'll, lined in mi outhouse, and have been furnishing a great deal of amusement to tho men, women and children of the neighborhood. When Henry O. Uiubreit, of 3,428 Bank street, was knocked down and clawed by thu big nialo bear about two ueeks ago snino of tho neighbors ympathized with him in his sufferings, while others ileclareJ that ho deserved what he pit and wus served rixht for leasing the Im ar, in which the whole com munity took such an interest L'mbreit is still t-oiitihcd to his bed from his wounds. Yesterday afternoon the bear claimed his second victim, when Frank htaab, the engineer at the pork house, missed dculh by n narrow margin. The two lieiint were bought by Seifried when small culs a year ago, and now they are uIkiiiI twenty months old. The male weighs !T0 pounds, and has a very savage and quarrelsome disposition. Hie smaller is the female, a 200 pound ani mal, very disile and tame. The pair of animals are destined for the sawdust ring, or as a means of livelihood to some poor blind man, and for the past six inout lis their educat ion has been progress. Ing very favorably under tho tutelage of "Professor" Freil Utzey, who has taught them quite a numler of difficult and comical tricks. At 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon the animals were going through their gaits and accomplishments, much to the edi fication of a largo crowd which had as sembled to witness tho entertainment After tho performance half a dozen men, with Staab among the number, stood about discussing the points of the bears. Staab w as caressing and playing with the little one, mid paid no attention to the savngo animal which was moving rest lessly up and down tho length of his chain. With a rush the bear sprang uon the stooping man and seized him with his paws, Staab attempted to get away slid seized a Hst, to which ho clung to prevent tho U'ar dragging him away. All the time the bear was clawing him with fore feet and hind, and at every scratch blood poured, and the man's cries for assistance wero pitiful Hi conqian ions wero so astonished at the assault of tho liear that they seemed to have lost their presenco of mind and were slow to act Fully two minutes passed before any aid wns given Stiuib, nud then John Young and Fred Schillinger seized Staab and lore him from tho clutches of the licnr. Weak and fainting from loss of blood and pain Htaab was laid upon the floor, while, hurrying messengers found Dr. Charles W. Parsons und Dr. John S. Douglas. The physicians examined the ma a und found that his right leg was horribly mangled. The skin was lacer ated, and in many places the animal's claw had dug furrow in the flesh, leav ing the bone exposed. Hi knee cap wns torn from tho I sine, and his body wa also scratched nnd badly bruised. The doctors worked on the man's In juries, and after they hud taken forty eight stitches iu different purtsof the leg, Htaab was placed in a meat wagon and taken to his homo at 2,210 Duncan street. Muah is 27 years old, with a wife and family dependent upon him for support. While his injuries are not fatal, they will keep him in lied for several months to come. His sufferings nre very acute. Lnuisvillo Cornier-Journal. An I'mlrrhleil I'lililng Mutch. A fishing match recently took place on tho lake between Bontkeepcr Allen and Dave Johnson, a veteran angler, for a purse of $00, raised in the ofllce of tlie Forest house. Tho men fished for an hour, stopping at noon. Proprietor Rich of the hotel, who acted as referee, found that tho collection of bass, pick erel and perch in Allen's string num bered twenty-six and on Johnson's twenty-five, Ouo of the hitter wa a black bus welching four pounds nine ounces. When the strings were weighed Allen's tipped tho scale at eleven pounds ten ounces, tho baby perch and pickerel counting for very little. When Dave's string, big bass and all, were balanced, the sculo indicated the same weight ex actly, without the variation of a frac tion of nn ounce. Referee Rich declared the mutch a draw, dfcluring that he hud never before heard of a tied fishing match in Jersey. Budd's Lake (N. J.) Letter. The Secret of Aerial Travel, So Professor Hognn swells the long list of tho balloonatic martyrs, and so the latest flying machine proves as worthless as Its thousand predecessors. When hu man ingenuity can match the product of nature when It can muke machine possessing as much power and endurance to the ounce of weight as that of the homing pigeon which last week flow from Detroit to Buffalo(223 miles) in less than four hours when it can so arrange and nutomal Ically shift a series of vanes like the shifting feathers in a hawk's wings, which suspend it in the air for hours almost, without apparent motion when it can solve the problem of how this same hawk drops like a bullet from the dizzy height of a half mile and checks Itself unharmed above it prey then it may learn to travel in the air. Cincinnati Enquirer. fhrlatian Young Men In Scant Attire, The conduct of some of the Y. M. C A. delegate at Muhtouiedi in appearing at the hotel table recently In rather scant outing costumes is not approved by lead ing racmlK-rs of the association, notwith standing the defense set up by Secretary Horton that at summer resorts such vio lations of the conventionalitiesshould be expected and admitted. Of course, a strict compliance with the conventionali ties of life nt such a place is not usually Insisted upon, but when a young man appears at table among strangers, includ ing many ladies, in simply a pair of trousers and an undershirt, it is simply carrying the mutter to an extreme tliat would justify people accustomed to the ordinary ways of living in entering a protest. St. Paid Pioneer-Press. llora la 17SO. A Buenos Ayres paper affirms that there is now in Bolivia a surgeon, Luca Silva by name, whose age is not less than 121) yea. He wa born in Cochabamba in 1760, and devoted, himself, after grad uating in medicine, to the practice of tdrgery. Lately he was taken to the house of Senor Josa Ramallo, president of the Dramatic College of La Paz, and gave a lucid account of the revolution in 1800, which resulted in the emancipation of his country from the Spanish yoke, Chicago Tribune. s ".. , 1 iiV'-e