EUGENE CITY GUARD. i. L.CAMFBHLU lrrttr. EUGENE CITY. OREGON. FROM AN' UNPUBLISHED SONNET-fl Ttwrtars three HiIuk beneath lli blessed skies for which I llv bliu.-k tym aud browa ana blue; Ikold Uiem ill moat dear: but 0 black eyel 1 Ur aud die and oo'r die fur you I Tennyson, THE HUMANITARIAN STANDPOINT. The KlfliU of frillilrrn O.ir lbts t the Uttls Ones A Seeded -e"0"" In undertaking this work, let u not feel too complacent, Un virtuous, too generou. To pay our debt U not to be generous. Children, all children, come Into the world our creditors, and they reiimlu our creditor aa long ai they reniiiln children. The tank of living leventy year In thin world of oun li thrust Uon them. That alone make them aur creditor. What we owe, what society owe to the children, to all children, ii gentle turn, tenderness, ooniiaBlon, protection, nur ture. Every child bom in thi world, in my view of the matter, has a right to food, cloth ing, shelter, education, kind word, gentle eoartnim, careful protection. But what wor paymasters we are. Instead Of what U due them', how often do they get blown, cruel word" ami cruel inflect. 1 have aunn in New York J children from 8 to 10 year old crowded into an unwholesome ga lighted, poor ventilated rsim, and kept at work twelvo hours a day corking and labeling bottles-twelve hour u day, nix day week, and llfty-two week in , .r Hut I believe the world's yea are opening. U e are coming to see that we owe more to the children tlian they to us. Our ambition to get glory and honor from our desceudnnt rather lliau our auoustors, in growing. We are appre. iatinjr our debt to the children more clearly. If children are 111 treated they Iweoine cruel. And why should we be so .hoi ked at this or that crime committed! Is it not natural tliat they should pay In kind; that they should say we owe Society nothing but Jiutt thlxl 111 treatment of children is something hid eous. The brute world is not cruel in the seuM In which na n are. We need another word for many of thine buiuau wsloiu cow Biouly called brutal. When we dmiguate them as brutal we are unfair to the brute world. Cruelty, like the other sellUu pas sions, Is binding. The more we practice It the less we are aware of it; or if we are dimly aware of it, it no longer seems hid eous. Cruelty Is a universal pawiiou. We are all subject to it at times, for we are all cowards. It Is in the air of the world we live In. The selfish struggles of life blind our eyes, deadeu our sensibilities, benumb us. A strouger striki us ami we strike a weaker. Our hearts grow lis easily touched. We harden aud 'trify. The tlnu, dirty, de praved face of rugged and neglected chil dren, which we we to-day, do not startle and haunt us as they once did. And may it not be that we need a new Iikhoii even more than dumb bruUisI Willis Uleed in Toieka thtaa) Capital. Huw It Feels To Frees. Early In January, 1H.M, I left Ked Wing In oomany with H. J. Willard, John Day, and Albert Olson for a place fourteen miles dis tant, uear where Vasa (.'hiirrb now stands, forth purpose of cutting and hauliug logs preparatory for our settlement at that point the following spring. It was a clear, beautiful day, with the thermometer 'J) degs. above aero We had a span of good horses, a sleigh artly liwdiil with lumber, forage, and provisions fur a few days. We arrived at the spot Jut before dark, and camped in a ravine well sheltered with timber. After muting oiii-selves comfort able with a g'Hid Ui'r, uud a buuing log Ore, all four laid down U sleep on a bed made on Hi- snow, Willi a thin layer of hay on top of mi IxmriU, mid were well wrapped up lu blankets, lim ing the uight tlie tent peraluiv changed to a turn We cold, the thermometer tailing to 4S degs. below aero, as we learned nticrward. Had we known this aud kept our tire burning, there would, of course, have beeu uo daugiT. But being very oomforlable we all fell asleep early iu the night, aud were unseoueloiis of the dan ger we were in until awakened by the pain of luteins) cold, and theu w were already so overcome with the cold that we lucked power or energy to get up or even to move. Comparing nob afterward we found that all had eiierleiieed a like sensation, namely Unit, au acute aiii, like the point of a ueedle in every xiro, but free from all mental anxiety, except a dull conception of something wrong and a desire to get up, but without sufficient energy to do so. This feel ing, however, did not last long, and sub tided gradually into one of quiet rest and satisfaction until consciousness ceased al together, aud without any struggle or aiu, either bodily or mental. We had all reached that stage when, by an accident, the arm and bare baud of Mr. Day, who lay on t lie out side, fell in the snow. This started the cir culation in his Ixxly, and gave him such in tense pain that he quickly aroused himself and got on his luet, and of course we were all saved.. It took a long time before we could use our limlo sultlrieiitly to rebuild the Are, and during tliat time we suffered much more pain than we had More, I am satisfied from that eierieiice that a person perishing In that way has a very easy death, because he sinks gradually into a stuior, which blunts his sensibility both to physical in and mental agony long before life become extinct Minneapolis Tribune, Hahles on Ihe lf. . Mr Feruandet, of New York, Is the prin cipal agent to whom mnnagei's look for their supply of stage children. Hhe lately ex pressed the opinion taut a baby Is the must important factor iu stage belongings. It Is absolutely uecessury to have a good baby one that will not cry, and good babies are ex tremely rare; therefore they bring a good price, A welt behaved laby in long clothes commands 1 10 a week if only lo bee in led across the stage. Of this cliuts it is ditllcult to keep up the supply, for the reaou that a baby doesn't long remain a baby. Mrs. Fenuuidex is one of the most motherly and lovable of women, and her family of a hundred or more children cling to her With beautiful affection. Bus said to an inquirer last week that peruns not In thebusluM cau have little or no idea bow good and tractable the children of the stage are. They are far easier to teach than men and women; they do not complain, aud they create no disagreeable scenes. Their kind ness and avmiwthy is noteworthy. "When one is sick," said Mix Feniaudes, "the sister or brother will come and bike the place of the invalid, or thev w ill double up tlieparta, or do any poaslble thing to keep the place open for the absent. The snuirica uf children fur mobs range from 1 to A a week, and for parts from $10 lo (JO a week. Hundreds of children are employed in the theatres of the country. They are totally free from the jealousies aud beart burning wuiclt disturb their older assiciale iu art, aud they think when ouce they take rt in a play tliey themselves are the pivot on which the whole affair turus. Detroit Free I'n. A pan of sliced raw onions, placed In a room where there is diphtheria, will absorb the poison and prevent the disease from spreatkug. The ooiuns should be buried every morning aud fresh oues cut up. The American record for ten mile was broken in the annual road race of the Illinois Cycling Club. Konisely made the distance in S0;0.with Gray, an other contestant, lee than two feet be hind tilin. The liest on record hereto fore has been 90:11 lor the sain dis tance. Both uieu rode gaieties. OLD MAN GILBEKl By ELIZABETH V. BELLAMY, ("KAMHA THOKPB,") Author of "Four Oakt," "Littlt Joan na," Kte. lOoprrlihted. All rihls reserved. Published by ipicW arrsngvineul Oompsiir w York. , . A yellow cur, with cropd ears and barely three inches of tail, jumped upon a log on the other side of the fence, ut tering a short, sharp Inn k. Old Gilbert -eie over the fence to right nd left of him, along the bridle path tlnil skirted the Held. "Whey you come film, you ondcmaiid fd beas' critter?" lie said, scornfully ey lug the cur. m lii li he rerogiiiised a the proerivif "dim r'urnivals." The dog answered u ilh a yelp, jumped off the log and ran across the hrldle l,Htl' into the wou.1. but presently returned at the heels of a lank, sandy haired, sallow youth, dud in faded jeans. Old (filbert's lieurt knoc ked at his ribs a he thought of his ticusiire in the hol low of the wood; hut "manners" de uiuiiiIhI that some grilling should lie given, and oli y dictated a certuin ob-seijiiiousiM-Ni of tone, but the old negro bade the youth "(lood morning" with a bow very many degrees removed from the respect lie would have accorded to "quality." The lad reHKHided with sullen reluc- Uni'. . . "Whicherway la you coiuiii fuuu old Gillwrt ahked, insimiutiiigly. "I dunlin vt hit's any o' jo' buhiness, a.H tlni siirlv uiiHwcr. "I ain't no furer from homo then you, en' I uin't u nigger. I'm a-huiitin' of a hawg, en' ef you uin I tolled hit tcr yo' pen, you ole prowler, uiuylx) you're fur gittiu' outer hid trucks." Old GilU-i t a heurt waxed hot. That he should be utciised by this 'hj' white trash" of tolling away n lean and scrubby old hog! 'Id) Lor'-a-miglityf he exclaimed, with a sort of p-rsiiasive indignation. "Uoaii vou en' yo' fidks know whut I have got hawg ev'y bhused year fat fi.iiin' cawiitinualr 1 cuoies uiy own bacon, en' is been doin' dat same, year lu, yeur out, gwan on fo' you wuz liuwn. 1's s'prised ut ye!" "Wall," drawled the boy, nieaaurahly suIkIii.mI by this reminder of a fact with which he was well acquainted, "1 s'picioiied aa ye're aller roun' these woimIs" "Mcr" interrupted old OilU-rt, with un uneasy thought of his buried treasure; then, recovering himself, "1 ain't ollen ow lull'." he said, with signillcance. "Lisik a-licre!" shouted the boy, ad vancing meiiucingly ,w liile the cur growl ed and showed his teeth. ' En' I b'loiig ler Kernel Jaier Thome," continued old Gilbert, w itU in Haled stiiN-riority. "l'se a geuimun's nigger, 1 is." "1 doan know ei that's anythiii to me," said Jest r'urnivul, with sullen ubulemcnt of his wrath, "but, come, now uin't you seen notion' of ow ole while niw in yo' cumin's en' goin's? 1 ain't inqtiii in' hat ye air up toe." Old GilU rt had dropped on his knees uguin and was lugging at the saasafras nails. "I'se coinin en guuig on my own proper urranls," he grumbled. "My own ers ileselves iloall Hot mi) wr counv uoui dat. Ilowaoinedever, I did see u lean ulu white now i t. I come uloug." "Whicherway?" The eagerucsi of the inquiry was us fuel to the Ihime of old Gilbert's suspi- cioiih. "Nuie ol ile uriuiu putu, ionow iu du woods," he said, avoiding ull refer ence to the route by w hich lie hud come. "'Spccl she wus gwuu U't de brunch. Whyn't you keep her jx-nned? Do aiu' liolhin' In de woods dis time o' year ler feed her." "You 'leu' tcr yo' busincsa e' I'll 'ten' ter mine," retorted Jesse Furuival. "I'rowlin' rouu' these vool lak a free nigger. Kf the kernel uin't got nolhin' better'n nail diggln' fur you ter do, why u't he send you ler keep track o' Unit racketing son o his'n? Nick Thorite have been in a tlx. I kin tell you, over ynnder ter Eden." "Wha'datT'old Oilbert asked, in quick alurin. "Ain't the kernel liearn how Nick Thorno wuz nigh en'uUnil cut ter pieces in a row with Muivus White? Over a game o' poker." Tlii.H was alsuit nil that Jesse Furuival knew of the affair, but he hoped to learn more from old Gilbert. "Do grct inawster!" exclaimed the old num. "When wua datT "Oh, over en' ulsjre two mouths ago. Ain't Ileum iinthiu' 'bout hit?" "Look-u-here, lioy," haul old Gilbert, "dere aiu' dat knife made what kin cut Muwso Nicholas ter pieces. Doan you gotolo no aecli lie aroiiu'. Who done iiit auvliowf" "Much you know!" sneered Jesjw Fur nival. "I done tol' you hit wus Marcus While done hit, whut ii sorter kin ter us ull, la-iu' he is second cousin ter Uncle Job's wife." And rwclliug with pride in the prowess of this family connection, the joutli spread his feet wide apart. stuck Ins thumbs into his "galluses, and eyed old Gillwrt dcllanlly. IK) law gwnn hoi mm countable, said old Gillwrt. Ef the law kin git lilm!" retorted the boy, with rxaaperuling laughter. "Mar cus White is done put all Tex is 'twixt It i lit en the law. Then reverting sud denly to the object of his search, "I doan see no tracks," lie said, inspecting the ground. "No; she win t ravelin' the aidge of de wood," said old Gilbert; "in amongst do leaves." The boy glanced towards the woods. Dulled lo his dog, and walked on. "IV while trash aiu' got no manners, nohow; sassvin' of a gemiimu's nigger," Muttered old Gilbert, glowering after him. "tjiiitlity d.wu ntiver talk to nig- gers dat-a-way. S'kmm t is prow liu "bout dene, woods? Hits ow woods! IjiWii! Lawd! 1 wou'er is ever lie seed me down in de holler? i'se tol' a iiioiiki'ous lie; 1 ain't seed nniie old sow. Lint 1 wus j s 'blecdged ter aesso. Unit her! I piutly doan bullieve she's got ne at luio" outer her lames ter feed de bur.nnls, dut ole Furuival sow, but I'm inighlly skeered she'll have the stren'lh ter go mniii' roun' dut ehiil bn-h heap. En' I'm 'stuibed in uiy lain' 'bout Mawae Nick, list bov ain't stiddy e he inoiight be, bless Gawd!" The thoughts of ull hearts at Thome Hill were revolving around Nicholas Thome at this time. On account of some irregularities at college he had been ban ished to "Sunrise," hi father's tuiut dis tant iUutaliuU, oaitly by way of jiuu- udiiiient. nartlv by war of keeping mm out of teinptalhili. The friends of the fumily did uol think this the wisest course to pursue with a young man nf Nicholas Thome's temperament, but the colonel was not a man to be advised, and Nichola hud been at Sunrise planta tion lnce early In January. No hint of the quarrel with Marcu White had reached Thorne Hill as yet, but the col onel was secretly fretted that his sou, in ull this lime, had never once sued to be reculli-d, and Miss Elvira's deepest anx iety had been aroused by a note received a few days la-fore, which had been mail ed at Eden, Ihe nearest pottlolllce to Hun rise, and was worded as follows: "Miss Thome. "KBbTK(TKi Madam: I am aOod fear In woman, and 1 feel it on my konscunce lo waru the famly of Mr. Nick Thome that Sunrise I'luiitation is a lonesome pluc for a young man of sperrits and ift lie are not sjieedily removed out of harms way great trouble is in wuitin and so no lore from yours respectful, "Kuxa.nn'a White." Miss Elvira, not daring to show this note to her brother, lest it might widen the breach la-tween him and his sou, had gone up to town to consult her cousin, Mrs. Herry, in whose judgment she plHced unbounded fuith. I hough she hail not always the courage to follow her ad vice. But Mrs. Herry was on a visit to her plantation in Jefferson, and Miss El vira had returned still burdened with the aniicting note, which she was always poring over w henever her brother was out of the way. She begun reuding it furtively at the tea table us soon as the r, .Ion. -I 'retired to his musings on the front piazza. Missy, why had come in lute to her siipier, was eating waffles and honey with a leisurely gusto thut had driven Grillin Jim to a stool in the kitchen, with the remark, "Fo' legs is la-Hern two legs ler wait on Miss Wini fred's delays." and thus Miss Elvira and her little niece were alone together. Winifred improved the occasion. "Aunt Elvira, said she, "don t you think it's time Urer Nicholas was let lo come home? He's been gone ever since befo' corn droppin'. Missy s calendar was of the plantation. "Oh, Winifred, I'm afraid Nicholas biu't ulways well conducted," Miss Elvira stammered, not knowing what lo renlv, "It ain't no difference to me if he is bad or Kd," said Missy sturdily! "he is Brer Nicholas. Only I don't believe he ain't Just as good as can be. "But heougjit not to disappoint his father as he does," sighed Miss Elvira. "Well, I reckon father disappoints him some," Missy replied, with preco cious shrewdness. "You don't understand, dear," said Miss Elvira,' wondering a little at her self that she should speuk so freely lo this child. "I fear Nicholas is wild." And Miss Elvira sighed deeply. In her vocabulary "wild" wus a word of the strongest condemnation. "l-t him come home, then, aud gel tamed," said Missy, promptly. This was Mrs. Herry s advice ulso Mrs. Herry, who reasoned from a sound judgment, and her own deep experience in a like cuse. But to advocate Cousin Myi lilla's opinion ojienly was more than this student of Bishop Ken could venlurt ukiii. I ler strongest Iion was thut Nicho las might be lamed by a luarnuge with his pretty cousin Flora Thorne, who hud the mt'i il of pleasing the colonel. That the olouel should be pleased was the all uu- Kriaui 'iiii, In view or wiiicii .nis Elvira ignored the fact that she herself had not found Flora (lawless. But this was not a subject lo I discussed with Missy, and she felt relieved when Glory- Ann interrupted with the announcement: "Missle-virey. here's ole man Gilbert. Ultimo 'in what he want. Ho mek gret parade o' secrecy 'bout what he got w rapiied in a ph'ce o' cloth; but nose kin smell sasHvfac anywheres." Fiiinine!" shouted Missy, and darted from the room. Jcs' hear dat!" grumbled Glory-Ann, in jealous resentment, as she followed her to the hack piazza. "Hukkom she g(M-s lifter ole mun Gilbert, stidder re- uiin'ln nie bout sassyfuc. "Howd've, Missel-viiey; huh you do?" said old Gilbert, rising to bow and scrape, is she crime out on the piar.za. "Thank you; patty well, Gilliert How do vou do?" I'm ter say tollable, bless Gawd; Missle-virey, I 'lo-ved ter bring a dozen uiggs fur a 'membrance, but de ain't all laid j it; an I knowed Missy wuz gwan be glad o' some sassy fac, so 1 jcs come 'long so." I've plenty of eggs just now, 1 in much obliged, Gilliert. " Tuhbe sho!" said the old man, and paused and scratched his head. Then, with a desperate abruptness, "Missel vircy," said he. "when you hear fum Muwse Nicholas?" About a week ago," said Miss Elvira, hesitatingly. "She uin't heerd bout dat cuttin scrape: 'bh-edged ter let on ef she had," old Gil lwrt argued to himself; then aloud, "Hit do 'ear lak Mawse Nicholas orter b'long ter Thorne Hill, Jhssle-virey. "Yes, he orter!" Missy declared. "Ilea gwan on 81, Mawse Nick is. come some dav de las' o' dis month. He orter Is gitteu' married." "No, he orien t! Missy objected with violence. Old Gilliert was doubled up with silent laughter when Ihe colonel came out ou the piuza. The colonel was a handsome mail, though past fifty, tall, erect, with clear rut features of a somewhat stem aud melancholy cast. He was formal and precise in twiiring. perhaps even a ti itte pompous, but ho could unbend oc casionally, and with this favorite old slave he was alwars disposed to be jocu lar. "Hello, Gilliert!" he (aid. "Any bas kets lo sell? You must Iw getting rich?" "Imllaw, mawster! Dis po' ole no 'count nigger gittiu' rich? I ain't selliu' liaire baxkit ter-night, suh; I come ter 'quire 'Unit Mawse Nick. Eu' 1 been a-studyiu', mawster, det beiu'a how dere ain't no odd jobs in 'tickler je' now spoHin I w in ter go down ter Sunrise, en' look aller Mawse Nick a littler" You call him an odd job, do vou?" said the colonel, not without bitterness. "Now, maw ster, you i comical, tubbe shot Hit's gwan ou nigh two years seuce Mawse Nick been home ter stay, en' I'm gittiu' ole. I hanker ter see dat boy w hat I mos'ly raised." " La w-massy! Hear dat, nowl" ejac ulated Glory-Ann in the background. "How kxig do you mean to stay?" the colonel asked, not unwilling to make in direct overture to hi ton. "Hit a matter of thutty mile en bet ter." said old Gilbert, nindiUllvelT rub bing hi forehead with hi horny fore finger. "A day ter go aud a day to come" . II. 4M f-ol "RomwHu. vou co bl-inorrowr ouel .uggesled, with secret trong a provsl. "You cau take the ox cart. P "Ye. uh." replied old Gilliert with a hesitnting thought of the hollow in the wood where hi treasure wa buriea. i ha' ter start 'fo' sun-up." "Very well. Ill write you a pas. Nicholas can write you another to return with." , . This meant unlimited leave of "Thankee. uh." said Gilliert. with his Glorv-An'n Immediately .ought Daph ne. Mii Elvira' maid, for the satisfac tion of expressing her wind. 'Jes' you orter hear dat uccuiustan tial ole nigger cluiiniu' dt '?- rtt1lH7 Mawse Nicholas!" said she, in high dudgeon. "Wheywur. me. I d lak ter know? En' while- I n; .'ru",i"rf'. mindin' of Missy, here he is cavortm of hissef 'bout de kentry in J0. ,.iv.a h i. i. ..if ironed h none hell ne iini I.U.7 i,.." m- - , lay in cluim ter tier privulliges 'cordin'. ruisin en' exactin CHAITEK HI. AMBASSADOR EXTKAOltHINARY. "UowdTye, Mnwnr Sicholan! hnh yon dor old Gilliert set forth on his journev In'the jolting little cart, drawn by a small black ox that went a plodding gait. The old man, with a view to doing Muwse Nicholas honor, was attired in his Sunday In-st a blue broadcloth coat with brass buttons, aud a black satin vest, once the property of Col. Thome's father, a mir of nankeen pantaloons, and a white hut, stiff and tall, discarded by the colonel. He sat upon a plank across the front of the cart, with his feet dangling outside. The plank was cushioned by a blauketin which was folded his every day suit of homespun. A box that held a contribu tion to Nicholas' larder, from Miss Elvira, was safelv la-stowed in one corner, at the bottom of the cart, where a wallet con taining his mam refreshment lay beside a dingy umbrella, the cheriahed posses sion of twenty years. Late in the afternoon, he came to an expanse of pine barren; vast, soletnu, sombre, it stretched in every direction, the ray s of the siiikingsun shining faintly athwart the multitudinous, tall dark trees, whose boughs, swaying in the up per air, maintained a continuous susurrus thut emphasized the silence. Himself and his ox were the only living creatures vis ible iu this solitude, save an occasional bird that darted ulxjve his head, as if in haute lo escape to a more genial wood; and old Gillwrt, to keep himself in heart, began to sing his hymns. Lifting up Ins voice, he mude the solitude resound to a weird strain, in harmony with the sigh ing of the pines: Oil. livln' humble, tuimble, buiubls. Oh. Hiu bumble, do bell dune toll.' Oil, livln bumble, billable, humble. Ob. IK In' bumble, yo' time gwan coins' The sun was down, and the moon not vet risen, when he came out on the other side of the barren, where he ceased his singing, being now near his journey's end; for at the foot of the slope was the large red gate that gave entrance to bun rise plantation. Old Gilbert dismounted, with some rheumatic grunts, to os-u this gate. A whipiioorwill was calling in Ihe grove through which he had to drive to the house; and as he climbed had: upon the cart, a screech owl uttered its uncanny cry. Drat dat cnttur! the old negro mut tered, in fear and anger, as lie stooped with haste to pull oil his left shoe. "Hit's sich a Isid sign ter hear a screech nwl: but de do say.ef you put off yo left shoe, yo' put off de bad luck. Lawd, sen' no bail luck ain' gwan fall ter Mawse Nick, 'long o' dat 'sturbance what dat Jesse Furuival named ter me. Leiumegitouten dishyer grove quick ez ole Brandy kin tote "me." But old Gilliert had to endure the sere nade of the screech owl vet some minutes longer, before he came to the second gate in front of the house of hewed logs. which was neither a crumped nor a com fortless dwelling, though it moved the acorn of the old negro fresh from the grandeur of Thome Hill. "Sich A place fur Mawse Nick!" he ejaculated con temptuously, as lie halted his ox. A vociferous chorus from the dogs greeted his arrival, and Gilbert prudently kept his perch on the cart, shouting lustily, "Hello!" "Hello, yourselfl answered a voice through the dusk. "Dai's him, bless Glory!" the old man chuckled, as he clambered down from the cart, while the same voice was heard silencing the dogs. Nicholas was standing on the piazza dimly outlined in the uucertaiu light of the new risen uiimhi; a goodly young fel low, tall, broad shouldered and straight a an arrow; his great brown eyes, his curling dark hair, hi straight nose and rounded cheeks, his broad forehead, and his mouth and chin with the silky, red brow u beard of eurlr manhood, old Gil bert knew by heart. "How d'ye, Maws Nicholas! huh you do; he shouted, w ith a chuckle of ex uberant delight, as he stumbled up the steps of saw n blocks. " by, where in thunder did you come from?" cried Nicholas. "Anything the waller at home?" " No, Mawse Nick, doan you be un easv. un is all pearL UU jes me. come fur change." "Aha! come a-courtiu'l" Nicholas returned with a laugh. " Can't fool me you're gotten up to kill." " Now, Muwse Nick I Pokin' fun at (lis ole nigger ! I come a-puppose to see you. 'Fears lak hit's so lonesome ter de Hill, douten you; en' Missle-virey, she soul you a lsx o gisxlies. 1 11 Jes step buck eu fetch em ouleu de cyai t. But Nicholas forbade. "Here, YirJI go bring in those thing," lie commanded a negro boy who wa banging about Ihe piazxa. "Hungry aud tired, 1 reckon you are, old man?" to at coNTmrD. FREAKS OF IXSAXITV. A DISEASE MORE PREVALENT AMONG MEN THAN WOMEN. Sot leelvl by lh. !" .!, uf Their K.ll-w l'a'""-A Ku"' Mperle... Menial Ills Alinrt V k..n Aiumii av Nations. nsaulty l a peculiar " prevalent among men than women. As a l,e cniiihe of a lew years, and of the lor paralysis It I the result either ol o Worker bodily excesses, and generally at tack man between the ages of dO a I 4U An ii.teresti.ig fart lu -"' "' tith the insane is the greal age U .which o many female lunatics live A mad wonmn . U really a rlr.1 class Insurance risk In almost every lunatic asylum the women great Iv outnumber the men. not o7lX".a they are so long lived but also because they are so seldom cured. It commonly surprises visitors to a lunatic asylum to find that insane people i notforai..oi..entdWeivedby the de lusions of their fellow patieuta Ka.li will think himself H-rfectly m nd bealthv. while knowing that all the others an hoisdessly mad Although a lunatic s mental freedom may be destroyed. It does not follow that his consciousness is abol Ihhed. A minister who was culled upon once to preach lo a congregu. - tics treated them to s sermon ne .i.... for children Much to his had sur prise he received ail indignant letter from one nf his listeners afterward, reminding him that while they might be Insane, they were not idiots, and that many of them were fully his equals iu education and In telligence. It is a novel exierience to attend a re ligions service at an insane asylum. Im agine a congregation of liinutlcs and Im beciles, men on one side, women on the other. In all stages of physical decay and all degrees of madness Helpless, old. grav haired fellows, with staring sunken eve's and hollow checks, mumbling and groaning to themselves. In utter uncon sciousness of their surroundings. Guuut looking, wild eed women, wiiii noiniug human about ' them but their vanity Wellington and iNapolcnli. r.lizawtn ana Murv Queen of Scots. Catherine deMedicis and Diana of I'oitiers, In lull cosiuiiih. facing each other; Ciixl and tlie uevu, sine bv side, restless girls, who niaue ineir handkerchiefs into dolls and rabbits and talk babv talk to them, occasionally beat ing them and tossing them in the air Intersiiersed throughout tins mm pv crowd are bright, kwn. young fuces, with ; peculiar line of trade. Ihe state of Ne uo apparent truce of I heir terrible curse ; Vluja harbors fen or fifteen, while the to any but an exM-rt obs-rver; n-linefi and j proffressof Utah is marked by having cultivated women, who in their lucid ii , f .... tervalsare as pure ami spiritual mm. led 14 Hltiri'ls. and vet are like the devil in rarnate when the tiuiuiu seizes them; fine, manly looking gentlemen, devout, digni tied and scholarly today, to morrow like the herd of swine into whom the evil spirit enters (Ml either slile of tlie ci.as)i i sit the keepers, alert and watchful In case nf an eiuerirencv racing tlieui is tlie i chaplain, a stupid listless looking nmn. K. this i lei.ivas no- lie d bV tl IS ,U..U v.. ...r. 0 t-,v i.irtl,.i...icv All writers on disorders of the mind have found it ditllcult to define Insaulty. ! In medical Jurisprudence. Illusions, aeiu sions. hallucinations, incoherence and de liriiun are all phases of insanity The Christian Science" people say that all sin aud all sickness are insanity Insane people frequently reasou correctly, but from erroneous premises A delusion Is nothinir hut a false premise the conclu sious drawn from it may be entirely logi ul. There is no reason why a uiau who thinks he has legs of glass, and iu other respects is iu possession of all his facul ., ul...,ilil ...( l.u .....iti lil,i . .f iu b imr ttn r,'t .ml resoonsiblM for leiml acta I which have no connection with Ihe sub ect of his madness Such a sis-cies of nsuuity seldom prevents a Dian from managing his own affairs or undertaking V l.ral relations for others. Most people are prone to delusions or illusions or some form or other Munv people never see things exactly as they are. u delusions ami Hallucinations m a test of insanity, half the world would be iu lunatic asvlums It is an interesting fact, recorded by Pritchard and others, that among savage nations mental diseases are almost un knowu. They come forward with the dawning of civili.alioii, and keep pace ith the advancement of mental culture. The restraints imposed by social order, the diversity of interests, the pressure of universal compel it ion, overwork, griefs, auxieties and disappointed hopes, the arti ficial lite of cities, ure among the causes uiost influential among civilized people in the development of insanity Among weak minded and half educated people emotional religious revivals also ojierate to a great extent lu Prance, however, the opposite extreme is found, for while Indifference to religion saves the people from religious Insanity, great numbers lose their reason through the vices for which their low uioral stuudard is respon sible. It is a curious fact that roving maniacs are never attacked by any contagious disease. Even consumptive disorders, dropsies and other chronic muludies have disappeared ou the accession of violent lusauity. New York Post. Iuvpiitor uf His Dynamite dun. "There is an untold storv connected ith the Invent iou of the dynamite gun, which is worthy a place In the story books alongside the accounts of Robert button s apple and i Galileo's swayiug chandelier ' 1 bus said ! a Michigan congressman who was among those wutcliing the recent launching of . tue dynamite cruiser Vesuvius. "Ihe dynamite gun, which Is now thought to be sucu a wonder, he continued, "grew from a piece of gas pipe uio&r.ted un a saw buck. Some five or six years ago a school teacher at Detroit conceived the idea of using a dynamite projectile thrown from an air gun. He got a long piece of ordinary three-quarter inch gas pipe, about twelve leet lu length, and myde a rough air gun to put his idea into practice. This wA mounted nn a mw hmli n.wl l,naa who saw the odd thing Inughed at It as the product of some crank's brain. It was taken to Kntt Wayne, below Detroit, where the oflirVrs tried It out of charitv to the supposed crank It threw a sma(l dynamite shell a short distance. Several wealthy Detroitera were Impressed with the value of the gun. and a company was soon organized. 10 lane Hold of Its uialiu fact ure. i . r penecieu uynauiiie gun til n hsi'lirM Im.,m.o . cauie iroru mis ooscurn beginning of a gas pipe mouuted on a saw buck. " At this point some one asked wbat be came of the schoolmaster "Oh, he has been lost sight of." con cluded the congressman "the same as most other Inventors. "Washington Cor. New York Tribune As sand consist largely of silei, which water at tlie onlinury tenieruture doefl uot didHolve, the wattr of a tuuidy . . .. ' ... gionieoiiirat.velypure. llie"liard" water of oilier regions is due to earth matter held iu solution. This earthy matter, however, is seldom harmful to those who drink it. An engineer on a Texas railroad found a big flock of sheep huddled together in a cut to get out of the storm, and in driving through tlieiu killed seventy eight Pieces of mutton were found ou the platform of the Last car. 1 SYRIAN CHATTELS. Orieatal eerfs Wh. Are K.sllr u ... D..n.. Id Tbl Country. The Syrian men, women aud children wbo PMrTtheblio thoroughfare, of aS di Men with religion, emblem. thl? f!?w. .emi-barbarou. design e. ; ith few exceptions, the vWimsof l lUj condition which can be hardly de- tiued from slavery. They are the human chattels of a Uas of Srters of foreign birth who have th iriuti, and established headquar-U-r in every city of prominence on the Pacific coast as well a-in eastern ceu- Thee human chattels, who claim to be Turks to advance the novelty of their personality in the eyes of the purchasing public, are the scum of Syria. Armenia. Greece and Italy. There are several thousand of these serf employed by their money making fellow countrymen in the United bUites. Hundreds are annually added to the number already employed. Ignorant of their legal rights and but jsiorly versed in the language of the country they tamely submit to their exacting master, receiving only their fund, lodging and scanty clothiug. These serfs sell themselves to their that iu a new country they will better their condition and be at least relieved of the pangs of hunger which beset them iu their native lands. Pledged to work either for life or for years for those who provide tiiem wim (mnarwirijiiion to the new land of prom ise, they are sent on their arrival in the ITnited States to the cities where their labors will prove the most remunerative. Thev have lately encroached upon uioit 'to them is a viririn field the Pa- .(it: coast and numbers are frequently beitiK sent hither to thoroughly cover every profitable point, There have been us many as forty or ! fiftv of these human chattels men, women and yontlis--ngn;,'eu in inaKing street sales in this city, hut they have .Wreaaed tititil onlv twelve or fifteen - . , . ... cover the trade of San Francisco. Seattle, TiK-oma and Washington generally in clude fifteen or twenty in their bound i nes. Los Aligeies is luvorcu wnu inn , - 1 - M J.I. presence of ten or twelve, while Oregon which, according to their gtutements, is proving to be the more remunerative field has from thirty to fifty of these serfs catering to the demands of their - - ' permanent, but, like the nomadio Arab ! of the desert, these slaves silently fold ' their tents and steal away ut the will of th-ir masters, which varies with the va- riutions of the trade. One of the places in this city where nomadic serfs receive : their supplies and render their accounts IS 111 JIIUUU Birn-v. It is a supply uejiot, and is conducted unuer me uame oi Joseph bbarbel Co. mere, in a room crowded with Svrians of both sexes, of ai 8izeg ftnj H)?,,s , a ttr,,e 8tock of trinkets and religious articles stored in pasteboard boxes of various sizes dis played on shelves which run aliout the room, This apurtmeiit contains two beds and a lounge, and the lack of other furnish iii?s is made compulsory by the space taken up by the immense stock which is doled out to be sold by the street peddlers in this citv and neighboring towns. Jo- wim Sluirbel himself is a bronzed and brawny Syrian, uiucn past tue years or middle life. He 18 the padrone who direct1 the actions and labors of the dozen of j COIUI0site nationalities of both sexes and various uges who were gathered in the I ,y .. ,: .i. ... roum-. '" questioned by a reporter, and while j ciiiiuiuin iu uo uiub.iiiiii-u hu uunia engaged in the same lino of business he displayed a knowledge regarding the lo cation of branch agencies and number of his countrymen and women engaged in the trade that was remarkable. Some of the supply dejiots iu this city remit regularly from $1,000 to f i.OOO a week to tlie east and Enroe as payments for shipments and invoices of goods. San Fraucisco Chronicle. Lawrence Ilttrrett's Head. A review of Lawrence Barrett's career is a lesson to all who basely betray golden opportunities. Think of this man as born of humble Irish parents a seven mouths' child, so frail in physique thut for the first five years of his life he could not lift his head! When later he went to school it was his fond mother who carried him in her hard worked arms. He undoubtedly inherited from both parents the seeds of the disease which has taken him nway in his prime; and on top of a weak body nature placed an enormous head, which made the but tle for existence all the harder. Lawrence Barrett, the man, could wear no hat not made to order, though on one occasion he succeeded in finding a tolerable fit in John Fiske's wheu this clever but absent minded philosopher walked off from Ole Bull's house in Cam bridge with Barrett's brand new beaver, leaving a less enticing headgear in its place. The tragedian remained housed nntil his own hat was forthcoming. Kate Field's Washington. Apples Are Easily Digested. Chemically the apple is composed of vegetable fiber, albumen, sugar, gnm, malic acid, chlorophyll, gallic acid, lime, aud much water; yet, for all this rather iniDosuin lot of insrredients. a good, ripe. raw apple is one of the easiest of all , ... .,i the ' vegetable substances with which the too often abused stomach has to deal for, after it has been eaten the whole of digestion is completed within process I, a t.i.f-A,lilil V olinrt knuM rf Alirhfv.flvn minutes' time. Detroit Free Press. In His Proper Place. It was only a lark, sir." pleaded j-i: 4 i.. ..j youthful delinquent, in extenuation of ". . . ... foolish tncic be baa played ou a connamg friend. . lo.l, ,v.v .i.i yiia tai aa, . eu, nfuu luq iuiiugi ou penilary magistrnte for the Manchester division of Lancashire. "Well, we have 11 cage for larks, into which I shall put - you for seven d.irr.',-Lonrton Tit-Bita. A , I ...... .. , . . , When the revenues of King Lonis were at so low an ebb that eveu the serv 1 ants at conrt conlil not draur iliu pu-u,m. at the Hlna . uuera suiL'urs presentea a petition to the prune minister a-sking for the payment of their arrears cf ''"y- . "fiun, n .M !....... . Daiu lur uiiuwier, we will first satisfy those who weep, it will then be the turn of those who sing." Tlie brownish discoloration of ceilings where gas is used is caused by dust car ried against them by the heated air cor-! rents produced by the gas. I the cniMSEliiif its organization, equipment., GENERAL rnunn,... 9 ww,,wl ,ur(i China's Eye ca Bussla-Tna... " frontier vmctn kail prlTj, Celestial Armi Arms. R..i... . "ts4 Those who believe that lutks niote future the ChrfieHe tniiiisT prove a thorn lu the side . H iiud their view corroborated In ." ... i .... 7. sa inu. in inecuriTui uuinoeroi luehilrn ale Hevue uber dis tlesaniml a " nnd Flotten. which treat of "l" reforms Introduced into the Chine Apart irom ine i uiuese mi uJ- minims, eacu province now to( regular army of enlisted InsipIZr!' , rvnse.yt , ted t roop, UU(1 ,wd U the JJi itiiiuediate command of these the best organized Pe-chl-ll. which, Instructed bv Pa?' ..Ul .1 II , r'U1(ll onii-crs, imi wen aruieu and clotM u uniform, serves Its model fur t 0nV What, however, concerns us n,,-. country is the reorganization of th.. of Manchuria, which has recent ? undertaken partly because (.'l.iM tiTJ 10 roiouiie mat reglou as a bul., against Itussla, and partly bectim. Ii fears that power as a daiigoruu, rival the Corea. This reorganisation 1. two years ago. Manchuria bei. .VJ into three districts, the united milil strengt h of which is said to .mount Z from 2.")t),(HH) to SWIO.OOO men. Ofthl, we are toid, one-third are armed ?i breech loaders, the remainder fit, 0iJ fashioned lireurms, bows, irrowi 1 lances. Thirty thousand are cunntimi, under arms, tl.o nucleus being ataaJi of 15,000 troops from the l'eilii II iT who have beeu disciplined after the Eur peuu model. WATCIIINO TUB rilOXTIKR, Kirln, the military centerof Manrbnria. possesses uu arsenal, uud watch, iu Hussian frontier withdctiu,l.iiienis,l1j,i scour the country continually to elm Ii ofbunditti aud keep the roads o n ( postal communication. Tlie cirilri formed into squadrons of '.'"0 men, tn armed with Winchester uiiiazine rifjesar Uemingtou repeaters; and their horvi though small, are active and servient' They are described as bold riden. tuk the usual ugly Asiatic scut; and, itrun to sny, they make uo use of steel nn,u in some cases are not eveu pruriW with them. Their formation Is iu rank; their pace the walk or gallop, iu trot being unknown. They attack it 1 swurin after fire, and to the sound of trumpets, the officers being in rear sj their men. Target practice takes place In July tU August, when 100 cartridges areejpeniW by each mau. Bad shots are puuuM, aud at the autumnal Inspection of tbt general commanding the best markinwi uro rewarded with square silver media; but, as the general's dog is permitted it wear the sauie adornment, the distinction is not overflaitering. The soldiers in well paid. Every cavalry soldier gets th equivalent of twenty -one rouble! ptt month aud his clothing; fifteen of u) roubles go to pay for the keep of bimstlf and horse, six remaining for shoe leather, washing and underclothing. As food, bt receives rice, millet and tea; fourtimni week meat and a small quantity of spiriu. while hay, straw and crushed beam m served out to his steed. There is a rtrj mental fund for providing remounts, but the soldiers do not willingly borrow fiui it because the bamboo is too frequently employed to accelerate repayment. Near the Russian Ussuri frontier in 8tatluned eight battalions of Chines in fantry, each 500 strong, which are chiefly employed in the construction uf fortifies tions. These are rapidly springing up ill over Manchuria, two of its towns, Kiria and Ningati, being defended by 1 girds of dltoched forts, which are built on tat European pattern, and In part provided with steel plates. The infantry rereitu twelve roubles a month, with clothing, and are armed with the Kemingtiiu if poatlng rifle, which carries a bayonet liii that of the French chassepot. OFFICERS AND PRIVATES. New drill regulations, similar to tU French, are being Introduced. On ti rade the officers look on, merelv Inter vening when the application of the stick seems necessary. The battalion Is di vided into four companies, whose chief bold the rank of major; nevertheless,! major general Is not unfreijM itlj f tent to assume command of one of tMav The officers make good the deficiencrof their pay by defrauding their men. v -..1.IU,. lu nftnn forced to till ll'lS 0WD UM .a . lahnKI f,.r tllB tirollt of l.iS OffllW The officers are represented as wholly uneducated, and dependent for promotid on the caprice of some magnate, sforwto they are ready to perform the moat mem offices. They undergo an examlM'w prior to appointment; which, howef. chiefly consists in fencing (with one swort or two), wrestling, etc. They spend tw leisure on the divan, dicing, chattering playing the guitar. Most of them are dieted to smoking opium, although W practice Is forbidden. Drunkenness also common. The uon-eonimissioiieii fleers are trained iu a school at Kinn; iw they arc not better paid thau the pn their sole privilege being to adorn tw hats with a brass button; but the ew" pack of meuials bclouging to a gencwj establishment assume the distinction as matter of course, wherefore It cannis held in high estimation. The mmauii consumed by the troops In Maucnuns. brought by sea from Tien tsin, but it" proposed to erect powder nulls in -province itself at Kirin and Tsitsihar. Articles in the Chinese press wnv pear from time to time afford mplP that the dangers of Russian igP" are beginning to be PP'f. Chinese have augmented heir taw fleets, are setting their military tions on an efficient footing md. L quite as significant, have conuKtea re lui, ii.,,. ti,a Wirnr Amoor BJ " f telegraph. St. James" Oazet The Weaker He No Lnsr- 8ocietv women nowadays tboW.T, realize tlie importance of good the matrimonial market, and S women are today much stronger healthier, as a rule, than the , ,rin nf ,,.a .tre,t, 0f a Satuw few minutes on uroaaway, - - ill j,AH.tM.i th tnHB this assertion. The women. are fresh or lace, ereci 01 "J heads are well poised and tneir a rounded. Their figures are tnm 1 w . -it .tnn with a strouir ann A , along witn a svroua -"T TV.. tlm Other Dailu. uo . " jointed. I tr.."e" "T, JJSTJ l. stride. The men, on ! cuesiea auu uonu- - Dill. 11LL1H L'ftU WWr"' - 1 iu. 1 . 1 a nM'l ru l-1.1t UovIa olna Aan iat) houP8 wutiij kept by theffl v idered ind it is remembered J0" ' dozens of cigarettes they saw . tJi( ; the dav and how many du'' , l.t.ll HO 1U1UII ilueu. -e sora XV pre' - In London there are not f0 t.trtw n,intifitnrinir ncriui 1T..-1 TTI"TI Tnver a ni o o 1 , . irivinir einniovment 10 - . i bands. In Paris there are on"" ( ' wublishiuents, which empty i hnnuJ nle. , r rr,, , . Ltl 1 il use iue largew ueu m Moscow, and is said to wcigD up f Tl, Kll rJ Pekin. LIU""" corded a weighing flfty-three w that of the Cologne caUi"" ewer twenty five tuna. .