EUGENE CITY GUARD. I. I CAMPBELL, rnriliur. EUGENE CITY. OREGON Tbe New York Kvenlng Hun rcrtr to tbe "true faots" In a certain court rami. Aren't all facta In New York true? Often tbe elements that move and mold society are the results of tho sis teri counsel and tbe mothers prayer. Free will la not the liberty to do whatever one likes, but tho power of dolus whatever one sees ought to be done. "What helped you over great ob stacles of life?" they asked a successful man. Tbo other obstacles," be an swered. Tbe punishment suffered by the wise who refuse to take part In the govern ment, la to live under tbe gorerumeut of bad men. Astor Is credited with an ambition to become an English Lord. There Is ito doubt be la rid) enough, but does not be know too much? ! 1 An Indiana lawyer became converted and died of heart disease tbe next day. Bucb casea are very rare, with or with out tbe heart disease fcaturo. L . J Duty elands for tbo most part close at baud, unobscurcd, simple, Imme diate. If any man has the will to bear ber voice, to Mm Is she willing to cuter and to be bis ready guest. . .J Tbe consciousness of work well done Increases aelf-respect, stimulates the energies, elevates the films, and exalts tbe character of the worker. While be Is striving to accomplish some good in the world, reactive good Is enter ing Into bis own life and being. When a man thinks that noliody cares for him, and tbnt be Is alone In a cold, aomsh world, be would do well to ask himself this question, "What have I done to make any ono care for and love me, and to warm the world with faith and generosltyr It Is generally tbe esse that those who complain tbo moat have done the least Tbe most enterprising advertising agent yet heard from Is In I'arls. He baa acquired the services of a msn with a bald bead on the back of wbleh are painted encomiums of aoap, pills, of whatever tbo agent chooses. Then tho Uvlux signpost sits In the front row at a theater. It Is a great Idea, and It If only a question of time, doubtless, when It will be adapted to poster pur poses. Teoplo who buy have queer bless. There are fads aud fashions In tho market, and goods that are lu reality tho best, do not always command tho best prices. To-day In tho markets the asparagus that Is rated Al, Is In reality Inferior to the asparagus tips that are treated as endings. A while laundry soap would once have been a failure on the market, because pcoplo thought It waa not as strong as a yellow soup. Children aro often trained to ex pect only an unbroken series of enjoy menu, aud to feel defrauded and as tonished when anything unpleasant In terferes with their pleasures. Thus they grow up qulto unable to bear the Inevitable burdens of life or to cope With Ita Ills. All power comes by ex ercise, aud the power of eudurauee Is no exception. To learn to endure bravely, to liear patiently, to suffer. If need be, heroically, Is one of tho most Important parts of a youth's educa tion. i . Tbo government of tho Mouth Afric.in Republic, through a series of commuta tions, has reached a Dual settlement c.f the cases of tbo members of the He form Committee, at Johannesburg who were convicted of conspiracy or treason lu connection with the Jameson raid. Tho four leaders, who were at tlrit sentenced to death and afterward to fifteen years Imprisonment, have been released on the payment of a tine of twenty thousand pounds each. Three of the four signed an agreement not to meddlo with the politics of the Trans vaal; the fourth, Colonel Rhodes, broth er of Cecil Rhodes, would Hot Sign tho agreement, and has been banished. The other members, nearly sixty lu num ber, were released on the payment of moderate fines and the promises not to engsge In political agitation. Hiram 8. Maxim, the Inventor of the Maxim gun, who Is now studying the subject of air ships, writes as follows to the Loudon Times: "I think I am safe In asserting that until a very re cent date the greater part of the experi menters on flying machines have been little better than charlatans snd moun tebanks. It Is only recently that men of science have actually taken the mat ter In baud, aud during the Inst six years a great deal of valuable Informa tion has been obtained, not based upon theory, but upon actual exiwrlmenta. I feel sure that It Is now possible to make a successful and practical flying ma chine which will at least be a valuable adjunct to the offensive and defensive powers of highly civilized nations who are able to make and operate delicate and complicated msehlnsry." l . . Van Bibber's adventures as an ama teur burglar, wben for a wager he went a round of receptions as an un invited guest, one afternoon In New York, and purloined sonro twenty-five hundred dollars' worth of silverware and other portable articles of value, are recalled by the discovery of an aris tocratic kleptomaniac In I-omlon recent ly. Hue la a widow of excellent social standing, wltb an income of three thou sand alx hundred dollars a year, and for a year past she baa been going un invited to weddings and helping herself to whatever struck her fancy. For months the police could And no trace of her, but at last she was caught In a at range way. She disappeared from ber borne, and ber friends, who feared she might have come to bsrm and bid no suspicion of ber conduct, sent a m hi nts description of ber to the police; the police bad a description of tbe wedding reception thief, whom they bad boon noable to And; tba two descriptions' tallied, and tbe woman was arrested. Rbe gave an assumed oame, and un der that name was tried on sixteen charges of theft one being the taking l of four Jeweled pins from the house of ! the Dowager Countess of Multix-sli'iry , and waa sentenced to six month' lui- j prlsonment Kho has Just begun to , serve ber term In a common IiIhIoii 1 Jail. j If the report should prove true that: the younger emperor of Bosnia will con-' fer religious liberty on the many peo-1 pics who compose his realm, then be will take one of the greatest steps for-' ward that will be made In tho close of the nineteenth century. He Is also1 credited with the Intention to abolish; corporal punishment for offenses against the law In all the Russias, and not only that, but with tho Intention to ! pardon thousands of political prison-i ers In Hllterla. These reforms will j mean that Russia receives at one stroke j much which the nihilists have been ; dynamiting emperors for the past llfty years to obtain. It will mean that the Jew can worship as he chooses and re main In ItiiHsla, that the horrors of the knout and of Hlberlan pemil servitude will he relegated to the shades of bar barism, along with the torture chnlr and thumhserew. If the young cznr ful fills these promises to his people, bo need not fear being blown up by his subjects. There will lie a general desire that Mr. Richard W. Armstrong may win bis suit against those unnamed New Yorkers who robbed him of the pleas ure of ncrsonallv conducting exiiedi- ! Hons to tho "uninhabited Island of Co cos" In search of burled treasure. It appears from the rexirts that Mr. Ann strong, who balls from Kan Frau-is.-o, but la too modest to apienr In ;lie di rectory of tbnt city, baa spent tweuty years In organizing and accompanying these little Jaunts, and one can appre ciate bis Indignation at being forced to break off this long sustained habit. If these New-Yorkers, whose Identlt." Is not yet revealed, bad not stolen Mr. Armstrong's maps and subsequently carried away the pirate gold, the Ann strong pilgrimages to this region, which Is descrtlcd as being "400 miles south west of ranama," might have contin ued unabated and wltb Increasing In terest until his death. Why Mr. Arm- 1 strong, during the twenty years lu which the "maps" were In his osaes slon, did not take away the gold him self la not stated, but the Inference la that he did not wish to end the excite ment of searching for It. The "maps" appear to have shown exactly where the treasure was located and had been a legacy to the Armstrong family from tho "great pirate Morgan," who person ally directed the burial of the money. Mr. Armstrong says the amount wss fl'O.OHO.IKK), but olio Is Inclined to doubt that It was not at least twice that In significant sum. The traditional pirate, nud Morgan appears to have been one of the most approved sort, tins seldom been known to bury less than llfty mil lions unless under exceptional duress, mid It Is probable Mr. Armstrong In computing the total litis overlooked a few millions. Rut tho uinln point after all Is that these thrifty New-Yorkers have restored tho treasure, whatever It may be, to circulation, which Is a distinct violation of tbe established eth ics Of burled treasures, besides lielng a unturul shock to the expectations of Mr. Armstrong. There Is no romance tq a lot of pirate gold performing the common functions of n medium of ex change, and If tho vandals of tradi tion can bo brought to Justice, a proper I regard for the memory of Mr. Morgan will suggest that they be made to take tbe treusuro back to tho uninhabited Itliind of Cocos, so tbnt searching ex peditions may be continued. i . . . j Men and Meat. "It Is a fact that there are more crunks coming to butcher shops than you'll find anywhere else,' observes the I butcher, as he sharpens his knife, and J curves away at half nn ox lying on the iiiock uerore mm, i suppose u is tue trouble of trying to satisfy cranky hus- liiilwlia tvltll flint ili.i.d I, The butcher's wife smiled brightly i lu assent, and carried on the remarks begun by her husband, In her owu i way. Kit id she; "It Is harder to please a man with meat than with anything else that Is put on the table. 1 know that, although my husband Is a butcher and can tell me Just what to get. I have seen that man turn up his nose at the most beautiful steak St breakfast, and at dinner time grumble bees me he could not have Just that particular cut. They I are the most inconsistent people on earth. "Who-- butchers or men?" "Men. I don't think butchers are worse than other men. Rut there Is something lu meat that brings out all the crankiness In a man's nature. It Is not the woman's fault that she can not be pleated with the meat that Is offered to her by the butcher. She would be willing to take most anything, but she knows that she has that hun gry, disagreeable man coming home to his meal, and that the chances are ho will complalu about bis food, what ever may be set before him. If I had my way, I would make every man buy bis own meat Then he would know what It Is." "tiood!" said the smiling butcher. Philadelphia Times. No Llfti on the Moon. In the absence of all Indication of any sort of life whatever on the moon, wltb no air nor water, together with the fact that uo change of any description has been noticed by the keen and trained eyes which have Jealously scru tinised Its surface from the time of the first teleseopele efforts to the present we sre compelled to conclude that there are no people who live In the moon. The wonderful combination of mountain and crater, valley and peak. Is, after alt, only a vast graveyard; and If living beings ever roamed over Its plitlns and navlgitcd Its great seas, now dry, or frozen with appalling cold, they have lcn gathered to the.natlone of the dead; aud all traces of them having vanished, the tall shafts of the mountains watch over tbelr btst rest ing place, and. with the crater rings, constitute their eternal and magnificent mausoleum. Indies' Home Journal "Isabel, why did you give your grand mother a pais pink umbrella on ber birthday r "I expect to carry It pretty often mysolf."-Chlcsjo Record. BOER AND UITLANDER. Tbe Cans of tba Recent Troobls la Booth Africa. The struggle between tbe Boert and tbe strangers, which baa practically be come a struggle between the English and the Dutch elements, now centers In the demand of the strangers to be ad mitted to the electoral franchise. Formerly electoral rights were readily acquirable by an Immigrant lu tbe Transvaal, as they are to-day In tbe Orange Free Rtote. In 1S81 a residence of two years gave tbe vote. But when President Krueger perceived that the influx of strangers would alter the character of tho electorate, and ulti mately transfer the balance of power to Kngllsh-speaklng citizens, be per suaded the Assembly to extend the period of residence required for citizen ship, first to live, and then to fifteen years, snd thus practically to exclude the whole of the new population which has come In since 1RHT. Thus electoral rights are now confined to less than (m citizens, while probably double that numlier of persons, of voting age aud sex, are living within the republic debarred from those rights. It Is easy to understand Mr. Krueg er's position. "These newcomers," ho argues, "arc In all essentials strangers to our polity. They do not belong to our Dutch Reformed churches; they do not like our customs; they do not speak our tongue. They would use their votes. If votes were given them, to turn out the present officials and legislators, and would end by making the country English, like Cape Colony or Natal. It waa not for such n fnto that we quitted tbo homes of our fathers to go out Into the wilderness and overcome the Zulus sixty years ago; and agnlust such a fate we will struggle to the end." On the other hand, the strangers com plain that, though they form a large majority of the population, own half the land In the republic, and pay more than 00 per cent, of the taxes, they sre denied n share In the government of the country nnd In tbe application of Its revenues, and are obliged to submit to excessive Hnd unfair Imposts, voted by a legislature, some of whose members are gravely suspected of corruption, and administered by officials, mnny of whom are far from trustworthy. These were the motives which prompted the creation three years ago of an organi zation to obtain political reforms, and which led to the rising of the stranger populntlon, or rather of the bulk of the Kngllsli-speaklng portion of It, at Johannesburg In December last a ris ing the declared aim of which waa not the overthrow of the Transvanal Re public, but to compel the Boer Assem bly to extend the suffrage to tbe new comers. Tbe effect of that abortive rising, and of tho expedition of the British South Africa Company's men, who came to help It, but were surrounded and forced to surrender by the Boer forces, has so far been unfavorable to the demands of the strangers. President Krueger's hold on his citizens had been previous ly shaken by their dislike to the otllclals he bad brought from Holland. 'Phe rising, however, evoked all the patriot ism of the Boers, and made the Presi dent, who successfully withstood It, more popular than ever. At the same time It stirred the feeling of the Dutch In the Orange Free Ktnte aud even In Cnpe Colony. Seeing their own kinsfolk threatened by an expedi tion which had started from British soil, they forgot for the moment their own commercial grievance against the Transvaal tiovernmeiit (which hnd built up a wall of tariffs against them), ami gave nil their sympathy to the threatened republic. As the British home government had not only dis avowed, but had even tried to stop, the expedition on Its nay, no resentment has been felt by the Cape Dutch against Britain. But the movement towards a political fusion of Dutch and P.ngllsh In the colony has received a check, ami the tendency of the Orange Free State to wards n closer union with Its sister re public has been strengthened. Mean while, the grievances of the new popu lation lu the Transvaal have uot been removed, and as the Influx of strangers to the Wltwntersnitid mines will doubt less continue, It Is clear that something must be done to give a more or less complete satisfaction to their claims, and to prevent a recurrence of the troubles of Inst December ami January. It Is Impossible, In our times, for a min ority to continue to rule over a large unit Increasing unenfranchised ma jority of people superior In intelligence and wealth, however strong the orig inal position of the minority may have lieen, and whatever sympathy their at tachment to their owu simple and prim itive life may evoke. Century. rtryce'a Tr bute to Cecil Hhodes. No man In South Africa has been more warmly attached to the British connection, or has done half so much to secure for Britain those vast territories to the west and to tbe north of the Transvaal, which wre coveted by both the Transvaal republic and by the Her man empire. But In his political career In Cape Colony, of which be was prime minister from July, 1SW, till January, ISlHt, Mr. Rhldea succeeded In obtain ing the support of the Dutch party, and labored assiduously to bring about a unity of sentiment and aim between the Dutch and the British elements In the population. Tbe energy and firm U eos of his character, and the grasp of political economic questions which he baa evinced, make hi in the most strik ing figure among the colonial statesmen of Rrltalu lu thla generation. He baa been deemed by some a less adroit par liamentarian than was the late Sir John Macdonald In Canada, but be la pos sessed of a fnr wider outlook and far more conspicuous executive capacity. The aacendaucy which these gifts gave him enabled him, w hile exteudlug Brit ish Influence up to and beyond tho Zambesi, at the same time to retain the conrtdenc of that Dutch, or Afrikan der, population which had least na tional sympathy with what Is called an "Imperial British policy." Ceutury. Bure to lie Popular. A certainty of the beauty of one's own work Is uot always coucelt; It may be a calm estimate of value. There may be In any art a Just presentiment of success, Verdi's "Rlgoletto" was brought out at Venice In ISM. It Is said that when the opera was quite finished the com poser bad refused to Oil up a missing part of tbe score. Tbe singer who waa to perform the aria besought blm to fln Isb It Verdi replied that there wai time enough. The aria, be said, wai quite simple and easily learned. Thla continued to be bis excuse until tbe actual day of the performance, when, with many precautlona against lielng overheard, be played to the mya tllled singer the enchanting air, "La Donna e Mobile." But as the listener waa expressing bla delight, Verdi cautioned blm on no account to bum or whistle the catching air liefore evening. The orchestra, be said, bad learned It already, and were under a solemn vow not to let one note be beard before the actual perform ance. "But why thla mystery?" asked the puzzled artist "Because," said Verdi, "I do not wish nil Venice to be alnglug It before my opera Is out." He was quite right In bis expectation. People began humming It between the nets, they sang It on the way borne, aud next day all Venice echoed with It SHED RIVERS OF TEARS. Ilur.tlng Ammonia Pipe Beta a Mul tltods to Weeping-. A dozen funerals could not have pro duced the weeping that there was on Harrison aveuue Monday evening, and yet there were no deaths that have been reported. The cause of the tears was the ammonia that was rampant on the street. The Klbbe Brothers Company has Just bought a new refrig erator machine for cooling their cho olate. The workmen had Just finished putting It In aud had started it for a trial, when a pipe burst aud the am monia vapor, which Is used for pro ducing the cold, escaped rapidly 'nto the basement causing a general stam pede. Nothing could stand before the stinging vapor, and It soon had tho basement all to Itself. But that was uot enough; It spread upward through out the building, but, as It was 6 o'clock anyhow, and the employes were Just coming out, It did no harm there. But It also spread out Into the street, and tilled It full as far as Dwlght strict and the passers-by had to hold their handkerchiefs In their faces. A con siderable crowd gathered as near as they dared to watch the efforts of one of the workmen to jt bis coat and vest, which he had left In the base ment In his hurried escape. It was Im possible to go Into the place again, and be got a long pole and angled through an open window for bis garments. It was hazardous fishing, however, and the ammonia soon drove him away baffled, and be went to supper In his working Jacket. Nothing could be done but let the ammonia waste Its sweet ness till It was spent, and the irmia was powerful all night Sprlugfl.sld Republican. Art in Ht. Peter's. Nothing, perhaps, Is more striking, as one becomes better acquainted with St Peter's, than the constant variety of detail. The vast building produces at first sight an Impression of har mony, and there appears to be a re markable uniformity of stylo In all the objects one sees. There are no oll-palntlngs to speak of In the church, and but few frescoes. The great altnrp'.oees are almost ex clusively line mosaic copies of famous pictures which are preserved elsewhere, (if these reproductions the best Is gen erally considered to be that of Ouer clno's "St. Pctronllla" at the end of tho right nlsle of the tribune. Des brosses praises these mosaic altar pieces extravagantly, and even express es the opinion that they are probably superior in point of color to the orig inals from which they are copied. In execution they are certainly wonder ful, ami many a stranger looks at them and passes on believing them to be oil paintings. They possess the quality of being Im perishable, and beyond all Influence of climate or dampness, and they are masterpieces of mechaulc.il workman ship. But many will think them hard and unsympathetic In outline, and de cidedly crude In color. Much wit has been manufactured by the critics at the expense of (hildo Renl's "Michael," for instance, and as many sharp things could be snlil about a good many other works of the same kind In the church. Yet, on the whole, they do not destroy the general harmony. Big as they are, when they are seen from a little dis tance they sink Into mere Insignificant patches of color, all but lost In the deep richness of the whole. Ceuturv. What True Friendship Means. Between friends there must be close sympathy, and one must be able to give to the other what she lacks, but even between those friends who are nearest nnd dearest It Is not necessary to lay bare one's heart. Such confi dence la too apt to be greeted with a curious satisfaction, and even from a friend this gratification makes one feel as If one's bruises had been touched with vitriol. A real friend asks no questions. She takes the best that comes, the best that Is In you, the best that you care to offer ber, nnd demands nothing more. She has long ago learned, being wise, that to all of us there comes a time when nothing should be said; It la true there la a time when something should be said, but there Is never a time when every thing should be said. There Is very often a alienee between two women frlende that means rest, and she la un wise who breaks that silence. Ladles' Home Journal A Bottomless Pond. According to current report Ulua rond, near Oxford. Ala., la barrnmin. Tradition says that less than 200 years ago tne site or tue pond was covered with a heavy growth of timber. The Indians say tbat several hundred noble red men were camped In the woods when the crust broke through, and that most of them perished In the rush. Ing waters. Nothlna. Base ball Catcher (roughly) What do you know about base-ball, anyhow? Fmplre (looking at the howling root-ersl-Nothlng; I m the umpire, you know. Boston Herald. Thirty-stx Milea an Hour at 8 en. The fastest ship In the world Is the Freuch torpedo catcher Forban, which can steam at the tremendous rate of about thirty-six miles an hour. There are lota of good thine s In this world without anyone to push them I along. Veys execution. Ab.orl Attempts. r"rm'' bat NT "ca l fo m'ric' "A family Record of Ney's Execu tion," written by Mme. Campati. U con- Ibu.edto tbo Ceutury by a relative of tll. lady. George Clinton (ien,t of (Jreenbush, N. Y. Mr- . l"a preparatory note, says: An absu J I at, tempt has been made recent y o pne In a published volume that Ney was not shot In ISI3, but escaped to Amor ,,., d became a schoolmaster n North Carolina, where be lately died. An alleged facsimile of his writing Is kIvpd in the book, as well as one of the writings of the old French cavalryman who. It Is alleged, wben drunk oil a cer tain occasion, declared himself to be the Duke of F.lchlngen. The wr t ng which It claimed is the genuine writing of tho marshal seems doubtful w.icn compared with that known to be nls. and the assumed similarity between that and the w riting of the old I' rencli soldier of North Carolina Is Inconceiv able It Is absurd to suppose that -ey should have proclaimed himself to be the Duke of Elohlngen. since at tho time of his execution he was Prince of Moskows, and no longer Duke of Web- '"It hi Impossible that, as is asserted In the book referred to, Ney should have consented to the subterfuge of being shot at by muskets charged with pow der alone, aud after falling and pre tending to be dead, should have suffer ed himself to be carried Into exile In n strange land. At the battle of Water loo Ney vainly sought death wherever the battle was fiercest. With nn army of sixty thousand men still left, be capitulated under the walls of Paris, upon condition of general amnesty of offenses Isith civil and military. These terms were basely violated, and to satisfy the clamor of the returned aris tocrats of the old regime, Ney was ex ecuted. Wellington could have pre vented this crime after the condemna tion by the chamber of peers, but (lid not, for reasons liest known to him self. Ney was offered nn opportunity to escape, but refused. He asked the soldiers to fire at bis heart, nnd they did. Moreover, nt the time when It Is claimed that Ney was concealing him self In North Carolina, Joseph Bona parte was living at Rordeiitown, and his house and his fortune would have been at Ney's disposal. Moreover, after the fall of the Bourbons there would have been no reason why Ney should not have returned to France. In Eugene Ney, bis third son, visited the United States, and went to the house of his kinsman Genet, who resided ou the Hudson, near Albany, but never heard of tills alleged Duke of Elchln gen. It Is useless to follow these ab surdities furtacr. Ney Is buried In Pere hi Chaise nt Paris, with two of his sons aud bis brother-in-law Gamot. A plain Blub marks the place. On the spot where he was executed stands a monument erected by the French Gov ernment Strangely Tongue-Tied. A singular story of how Jack Frost captured a burglar comes from Fort Benton, Montana, by way of a dis patch to the Philadelphia Times. Dur ing the severely cold weather In Jan uary Tip Burba nk, a notorious robber, i went out alone one night to make a mid on the First National Bank of this place. Ills plan was to enter through a window at the rear of the ; building and make his way through the -offices to tiiv fault An Iron gratlug protected the window. The night was Intensely cold and the ! streets were lUe glass, a heavy snow having melted as It fell and then frozen i smooth and hard. While Tip was filing the first bar of the grating bis foot slipped, throwing hlm forward vio lently against the window. As luck would have It the fall Jerk ed his month open, his tongue was forced between his lips, and froze in stantly to the Icy Iron bars. All ef forts to release himself were vain, as nothing short of pulling his tongue out by the roots would have effected this, nnd he could not bring himself to that. A watchman making his rounds found him a half-hour later almost dead with cold. Tip Is alive and safely housed In Jail now, but his tongue will never wag SKaln. It Is completely and hopelessly paralyzed. The Dead of Kt. Peter's. And far below all are burled the great of the earth, deep down In the crypt. There lies the chief apostle, and there lie many martyred bishops side by side; men who came from far lands to die the holy death In Rome from Atheus, from Bethlehem, from Syria, from Africa. There He the last of the' Stuarts, with their pitiful kingly names, James III., Charles HI., and itenry i.v; the i.mperor Otho II. has I lain there a thousand years; Pope i Boniface VIII. of the Cnetanl, whom ' Sdnrra Colonna struck In the face at i Anagnl, Is there, and Rodrlgo Borgia Alexander VI. lay there awhile, and , Aguese Colonna, aud Queen Christina of Sweden, and the Great Countess, 1 and many more besides, both good and bad-even the Caterlna Cornaro, Queen ! of Cyprus, of romantic memory Cen-! , tury. ' I Old Missouri. ! I Col. J.V.Brower, Minnesota State ge ographer, has made the sensational dis- ! covery that the source of the Missouri River Is not Red Rock Ijike. Montana 1 as has been stat.nl. Col. Brower hns explored the whole region of the Upper Missouri, aud now makes public the result of his discoveries. He avs the longest upper branch of tbe Mlssou-l does not flow through the lower Red ' Rock Lake In Moutana, but comes from a hole lu the mountains, volcanic In p character, at the summit of the Rockv ' Mountains, west of Helery's Uke Ida ho. and at a point bordering the bom. ! dary between that State and Montana Bad Neva for the hrsma "They say Mrs. Maybrlck will be re leased soon." remarked Miss Kick ! ;l hope not." declared her friend. 1 "Why? Has she failed to ImnrcM you with her Innocencer "No, but we actresses have eomnetl t on enonirh m Petl- -New York World. "'reauy. i LET US ALL LAUGH. ! JOKES FROM THE PENS OF i VARIOUS HUMORISTS. ' riessant Incidents Occurring the World Ovr-BalogsthalAreCbeer. ' ful to Old or Voqn - Fonnj i Selections tbat Ton Will Enjoy. I t'nefnl. Papa-Billy, you've been a very good little boy this morning. You baveu t disturbed me once. Billy-Yes. and I've !een doing some thing real useful, too. I've cut all the ends off the elgan. In that box over there and now you can Just go ahead and smoke them without any trouble. Harper's Bazar. Verr Appropriate. Miss Amy-Why have you named your yacht the Kiss. Mr. Dolley? Isu t that a queer name? ! Dolley-Not at all. It's a little smack. you see. Demorest's Magazine, Wealth's Advantnee. ! Mr. Foreflat-Thls being so poor la terrible. Isn't It? Mm. Topfloor-Indeed, It Is. If we could only afford It I would have nerv ous prostration to-morrow. Truth. Vp with the Tlmee. j Mrs. Knlckerbocker-Wbere Is your : husband this afternoon? j Mr. Blooinerlne-Oh. he Is attending i a father's meetlug down at the church. ! New York World. ! The Hells. Hear the scorchers with the bells -Brazen bells I What deafen. in disiioters their melody foretelli! Ilnw they clang, clang, clang, clang, Morning, anon and night! While pedestrians who ramble Through the streets are forced to scram ble In a paroxyum of fright Keeping time time, time, la a sort of ghastly rhyme, To the startled shrieks of passers-by tbat every moment swells, At the sound of the bells, bells, bells, belli, bflli At the clamor and the clangor of the bells. Beneath Con tempt. Mrs. Flgg Tommy, why Is It you never play with the little boy next door? He seems to be such a nice little boy! Tommy Aw, be'a one of these sneak In' kind of kids that says be likes bis teacher. Indianapolis Journal. Expensive Anceatnra, Parvenu (to distinguished artist) What will you charge to paint a grand father for my gallery of ancestors? Artist Five hundred marks. Parvenu Five hundred uinrks? Why, Mr. Dauber painted me a great grand father the other day for 200. Flle gende Blaetter. Another Canablonca. The boy sat on the scorching wheel, Of nothing did he reck Till a copper man put after him, And grahbed him by the neck, Detroit Tribune. Wouldn't Know It, " uat yer nnk 'cr my dog?" "Vcr doesn't call that a dawg, docs yer?" Yus!" "W'y. i fort lt WUI a D00 fowtygraft!" Near and Dear. "It waa only yesterday that I gave you J20." "I know It Harold, but I handed you back 110.50." ' "What became of the other SO centa?" Detroit Free Tress. , She May Live Through It Gertmde-I see tbat Mrs. Dasher has Cot the alimony. Aunt Sellna-Dear. dear! I'm afraid It will go hard with her; she's such a frail nervous thiug.-South Norwalk bentlnel. HealUtlc, Emily (playing "house")-Now, I'll u-M, nd,B.efisle ' be our babies. . ; "f. aufter moment, anxiously) Alnt It about time to whip tbe chil dren. Home Journal In the Tnnnel. .hH,'erWhat 18 "la, 'ni noise ahead of us. conductor? I, there some thing wrong with the engine? Conductor-No; the train ahead of 'he Mean Th nT. Ml,l the Lovely Woman "It was very lonely, living In , he West' vi neighbors to speak of .- Thinh."lM1' t0 Mjr" Tcn,"red the Mean nn tn lKhl,or, ,0 aboutr Clnclnuati Enquirer. . wklnB the BbT. w ,WSke ,lle b!lh.'. mamma r JohnSr5'0UWaD,,0Wak'aby, 3ig 1 faD P1"J 00 drum."- Mr- ye,tr0a 0bJtlon. Mrs. Manhattan-Wlmt objection M rail's k Tr5;1UB Mr' Truih alimony already.- 'cceatrte. MIs. nifltre-Yea. . roB last st nigtit and I accent. 1,7 Mlna Durutl. I .1... . lUSl SO? It. lam that you are going tob,,', M!.-s H. (In aurprls,.)- .nU.lfi Hla Yacht'a Nam- Illobbs-I beard you are for Cuba In your yacht? ,tol Klobbs-Ves. and I've cu,nw . name to enus de Mllo. Blobbs-Whnt for? Rlobbs-Ro that they .,., as any" arms on ber.-phn-T lias Record. 'pan A Forc-Hunner, He I dreamed last night that I dead. ' Bbe The room was rather wasn't It? Bo pc fa I. "I guess country board will b ew cr this euuimer than usual" ua u Meekton. "' "Why?" "The price of canned good! ouim, down coiisldcrab!y."-Wasulnjt(n No Doubt. Wendroth-Do you tUluk ih, advance of the wheel has anythio,, do with tho bard times In ceruinouif ters? H Willing-Well, there Is no doobt tw a good many people feel soreoTtr t. Philadelphia Nortb-Amerlcao. " Limited. No man know a bow limited bit wtri robe Is until a Chinese laundry bur up. Ixs Angeles Express. No Need of It. Laura I am surprised tohttrjta are not going down to tbe KjUn this summer. How's that? Lulu Oh, I dou't have to go nn year. I'm already engaged to Urn rlcd. Vnukera Statesman. Floored. t He Oue portion of salad iS a, won't It? She For me? Certainly. ITum you going to take? What He Made. She Did you make auythlnjli'i! trade with Bacon? He I should say I did! I mid lifelong enemy. Yonkers Statewui Tratredv In Four LlnM. A lady fresh from Ireland, J A stov that ran on gatollut; j A noon slsrm of bre snd i Some bandagci and vateline. Indianapolis Journal. Muaic.il Trrma, The piano stool-Dldu't you tor havo tbnt flufTy-bnlred beauty ru little white fingers up and down r keyboard ? The plnuo-I did, until she pM false. The stool-Wretched coquette! liw never forget how she sat down on -Cleveland Plain Denier. Perhaps. He-Why Is It that unmarried are usually "girls?" Khe-Posslbly for the saitrM" that married men are mostly "tJ Brooklyn Life. nr.,t llnnnrr. "For three months during th I occupied the most dangerous H"1 In my company. 'i...iH "Yes, every morning I currW ' eight mules belonging to our c- snry."-Mlnnenpol!s Times. Unkind. ,. Wlgley-Whay type of beauty rtj !.. TTn,.lw,itln'H fsce 3 U II BUY aiinO 11UI iviu" - -- " . . . . tint f" Quigiey 1 suctiid ". pled.-The Capital, Washington- Faved Them I'P- oinirr s iflicjvu '. . . ... ,tA. r?Ha pah aaif) diamond necsiacei yj Brother-No, didn't ktw an Tlster-Yes. she bad It mal ! J the setting of her last seas' gagement rings. . .h POP Jmtln McCartny on " j $ Justin McCarthy a "Pope Leo XIII." " "hT the public. Mr. MeCartby glus bla volume with an acceiim selection of the Pope for n' place. He then deals with n days aud goes on to trace i m lu the Romau Catholic Court tentlou Is given to the Pop a In refereuce to Ireland and ' j., establishment of the hleran'W In Scotland. Other points 01 ( ograph are l-eo as a personal " Philanthropist, and bis action ur- education question Id I ranc glum. JSP v . r. r mi