EUGENE CITY GUARD. I. L. OAMfBr-I-L, rrrllor. EUGENE CITY.. ,.ORE0I ' Id the oplutoo ot me world, mar riage ends all, as It dors In a comedy. Tbe truth la precisely the reverie; It begin til. Music, Id the best aetiso, does not re quire novelty; nay, the older It I and the more we are accustomed to It the greater In effect. We put things In order; God does tho rent. Lay an Iron bar eaHt and west It la not magnetised. I-at It north and anuth, and It Is. Yonder be drlvet; avoid that furious beoat If be may have bin Jest, he never rare at whole expense; nor friend nor patron spore. Perhapa Millionaire Fair knew how many women would claim hlni aa bus- band. If be did he allowed Kxd Judg ment In dying just when be did. If raderewskl aaya thla country la rotten to the core we are ready to bet : that It la; Paddy bni taken everything 1 but the core and he ought to know, i There are aome mlnda like either , convex or concave mirrors, which rep- j resent objects such aa they receive theui, but they never receive them us they are. The Injuries of life. If rightly Im proved, will be to us the strokes of the statuary on bis marble, forming us to more beautiful shape, and making us fitter to adorn the heavenly temple. , This Roentgen ray bualnesa hns gone far euough. A New York physician so) s that by using the new ray he has "found the streptoooceua erysipelatous prolif erating In the Intenipaces of the con necting tissue." Thluk of that! i - - I It la to be observed that Queen Vic toria, although she welcomed the an cient and liouoralile artillerymen of Boston cordially, did not Invite them to atay to tea. Her majesty probably remembered that tea party In ItoMton some years ago, which was followed by the most unpleasant results for on of her distinguished progenitors. j If the Weather Htireau at Washing ton accepts the challenge of W. T. Foster, of Kt. Joseph, Mo., the relative merits of the stars and science as an aid to prophets should be determined def initely. Mr. Foster remarks that the people have contributed fin.fum.oon in twenty-six years to pay for the weath er reports, and yet be thluka he can diagnose the symptom's of the elements with more truthfulness than these (iov ernment seers. lie la willing to back bis opinion with cash and even eon code h! opponents odds, he making his predictions thlrty-llvo dnjs In advance and the Weather Ilurenu seven days In advance. This seems a rash offer ou the part of Mr. Foster. The Weath er Department has shown an ability aevernl time to forecast "exactly wrong." and with this singular freedom from wahlile would prove Invincible If It should linppcn ou the right tack. Now St. Tatd claims the center of the stage with a suit which Is quite sim ilar, though differently imiinigcd. lu order to avoid constitutional objec tions. Miss Kittle F. Smith bus brought suit agulnst the estute of the late Alfred J. Hill, who died lust June. Kittle wants $2,500 because Alfred died without changing her name, as ho promised to do. It certainly was a mighty menu trick to die and leave Kittle handicap ped by the name of Smith, and we pre sume she will have no dilllculty In con vincing a Jury of the JiiHtlce of her claim. Kittle has modestly put It) a bill for $100 for "resigning her position In order to get married," and also oslis for f'.'OO for her "trouble lu getting ready j to bo married." Khc thinks 12.000 will about heal her wounded heart for AI- f rod's otwttinncy In dying Jtntt at the wrong time. Whither are wo drifting, brethren? Is the new woman to pursue us even on the other side of tho river of death? E1U Wheeler Wilcox, the poetess of passion, and therefore regarded by tho ! unsophisticated maidens of the land as ' su authority in all matters of the heart. Is of oplnlou that flirtation Is a tine art, developed from a woman's Inborn mating Instinct. "It Is tho natural weapon of defense of tho uniososscd," she declares; and she goea ou to nay: "I wish I might write of flirtations as the deadliest of dangers, aud warn nil womeu whose eyes fall upon my words to avoid Its pitfalls. Hut when I am asked to discuss a subject, I must speak the truth of It as I see It. nud I am sorry to record the fact that the girl who la utterly devoid of coquetry seldom marries either so early or so well as her tllrtlshly Inclined sister. Men admire aud neglect the thorough ly prudent woman. They disapprove of and court the wily coquette." Which Is Immoral balderdash-Immoral be cause. If followed, such advice would lead more women to misery than to hnpplneM. and balderdash because It Is not true. Men enjoy flirting, as women do, for the pleasure to be derived from a trial of wits and for the posalhle ele ment of danger In It. But a uion. If he Is a man worth marrying, never flirts with a f Irl for whom be has a sufficient ly high regard to think of her as bis possible wife. Since the accession of Balllugton Booth, of the Salvation Army, the financial question baa been the first to take the form of a real "problem." V'p to the preseut time the army bos had a comparatively easy time lu raising the wlud. The country bad come to regard the army as In Its way a neces sity of our clvlliiatlon, and conse quently the pecuniary support of It has been aa well assured as that of any others of the religious facts of our day. Tb "American movemeut," however, la scarcely three months old, and the question cornea In tbe way which was sooner or later lnerltahle aa to the necessity of two salvation armies In stead of one. Nobody seems to have ' thought of thla at drat, not even Bal- Ungton himself. At tb outbreak of tbe war, li was merely a question of toler ation. If Balllngton wanted to upllt the army, It was nobody's business but bis own, and nobody dreamed that In a few weeks, when the hat went round. It was going to be everybody's busi ness. This alters the complexion of the case. The argument against the "American movement" has come up which has been used with such force In the case of the Influitealuiol sectarian Ism of our country churches. Chris tianity has suffered not more from Adam's full than from the Inability of small communities who could support one church handsomely to support a half doiteti of them preaching dlverao Isms. Everybody haa a right to pro test wheu the financial phase of these matters Is reached In the salvation iirmy or any where else. The verdict In regard to the railroad accidents near Omaha and near Chi cago will undoubtedly be tliat some body blundered. When the verdicts are rendered, tin parties who were Kiill'y of blundering at a time when they should have had their wits fully In their possession should bo arrested and held to answer for their eareli nem. Nobody Is Infallible, and the best of us, In our brightest momenta, are liable to err; but there U ample room for Judgment as between error that Is Incxpllmliln and neglect of a common duty, 'the Omaha wreck la said to have been caused by forgctfulncsa ou the part of the engineer aa to bis orders to wait ou a Milling for two trains. Ilo waited for one of the trains, and when Hint had passed, pulled his train with It precious freight upon a track over which a flying mail train was suppose! to have the right of way. The Chicago accident was due to a neglect In switch ing which sent an excursion train going at the rate of ten miles an hour onto a siding that wus occupied by a freight train. The fatal wrecks will Increase the prejudice against excursions ou tho rait and on the water which exists to some extent In the popular mind, as a result of accidents which have been traced to neglect on the part of tlnwe upon whom rested the responsibility of safely trnnsHrtlng the Ill-fated ex cursionists, lu some liistnncc wrecks) have been traced to lapses on the part of engineers and pilots following over indulgence lu the refreshments which are generally plentiful ou such occa sions; and fear that the general hilarity Incident to excursions mny Infect those who should carefully mnlutaln their mental coinpurc Is one of the reasons why some peojde cannot be Induced to travel with excurslou parties. Of course, those who are thus moved by fear comprise a very small minority of the public, but that small minority gnius In number every time an excur slou wreck In reported. I 'or Young Palsies. Tho question of healthful food for the little ones during the summer weather Is all Important one, and one that every mother ought to study. Home will thluk It necessary to avoid tho use of all cereals at this season, because they have understood that oat meal and such foods are beating, but a good selection of various cc renin, and careful preparation will be found more nourishing aud less heating than men is, and they may be most acceptably formed Into puddings, etc., for the little ones who soon tire of the various fresh vegetables. hut still a not tier Important point lu the summer food question Is the use of civn in, rather thau butter. The numerous heullhftd "grits" and course i-e reals that Mood our market: to-day, were unknown In my grand mother's time, but she was never known to be without her rye, cvrn or graham bread; barley-cakes, busty-puddings, samp, hulled corn, and n home-made kind of crncke.1 wheat. Aud how delicious were all these things when served with a generous pitcher of cream, which was ever a complement of grandmother's table, at breakfast, dinner or ten. She wan sometimes without butter, but the cream was never missing, nod It more limit mad, up for this lack. Too Cool. An Instance of unusual and perhaps unwisely exercised "nerve" lx related by l V.. It.von lu hi experiences with the wounded lu the Franco-Prussian war. A young man. hardly more than a boy, had been shot through the wrist, iitid an amputation was considered ne cessary. He wiih a vivacious, charm ing young fellow, with n beaming coun tenance and n twinkle lu his eye, and when they went lu to tell him the ver dict and take him to the operation ward he was smoking a cigar. Not a whit dismayed, lie got out of bed, partially dressed himself, and trli ped briskly up the passage, smoking his cigar all the while until he mounted the operation table. His arm was am putated, but wheu he recovered from too chloroform state he refused to go back to bed until he had neon his com rade's leg cut off. "I want to see how It Is done," sold he, coolly. Then he quietly smoked another ci gar nud attentively watched every step of the operation, and when It was over he and his companion returned to their ward together. KiplMlnlng lu "Say, Maine," said Maud, os she bit off a tiny piece of chewing gum. "I've been Improving my mind again." "t!o 'way! You haven't!" "Yea, 1 have. I have been reading all about the conveutlon. Ifa perfectly fascinating, too." "Can you understand It?" "Most of It I used to think a conven tion was stupid, but It Isn't a bit. It's Just like a gymnasium or riding a goat at an Initiation, or something of that kind, you know." "How do they dor "Why, they bring out a plauk." "Yes." "And It's very wide; and the candi dates try to straddle It, and other peo ple try to keep them from doing so; and the aide that wlua gets tbe nomluatlou. I don't know what It means, but that's the way It's done, for I saw It In tbe paper."- Washington Star. "Brown Is a good shot, Isn't her "Very good. We were practicing with our guns at my country place the other day, and he bit tbe bull's eye the first time." "Very clever." "Yes; but be had to pay for the bull." Harper's Weekly. SIGNS OF THE TRADES Origin of lra ftr Rostles. Mirb-r I sole aad Oolden Italia. i The last survivors of the old trade algna are few, but they cling to life so tenaciously that the probability Is .he ! will atay for good. The old style swinging algna that protruded from the sides of the bouses, and on windy days hud an unpleasant habit ot crash ing down on the heads of any cltlxens who happened to be struggling home, have happily keen awept away by the j march of progress. Hut we still have I with ua the barlier'a pole, the pawn- i broker'a golden globular triplets, the tobacconist's woodeu Indian, and the 'goldbeater's gilded arm. with shirt ' sleeve rolled up to the shoulder, dis closing a massive muscle, with sinewy fingers grasplug a goldlien tor's ham mer. The origin of those signs ore mut ters of great Interest to the people who pass them dally and kuw nothing of ' the significance of their construction. An Interesting story Is told lu con nection with the familiar red, yellow aud greeen vases that brighten the windows of drug stores. The custom of puiclng them there originated with an apothecary who found himself one night minus the red light with which tradesmen of his class were accus tomed to ornament their store fronts. To make up the deficiency he got a bot tle of red liquid and placed a candle behind It. The effwl pleased him ao well that he decided to Improve It by placing a eccoud red light In the win dow with the Old of another bottle of red mixture and an additional candle. This sign made such a brave allowing that an envious rival cast obout for means of Improving on the sign. He bit upon the scheme of placing a Isitlle colored with yellow fluid beside tho red one, and then aurpossed hla previ ous effort and carried all lefore him by placing a green Imh1o beside the yellow. The three mode a sign that caught the town, and all tho druggists quickly fell Into line. The bottles were lu time replaced with the handsome , vases at pn-sent lu use, and the drug gist's sign wna here to atay to brighten i the dingy atreeta of town and village. Few among the many unfortunates who puss iM-tieath the three gilt balls Into the sorrowful Interior of a pawn- ; broker'a shop stop to consider the meaning of the yellow sign; and they , would find little comfort In the Investi gation If they did. They pawnbroker's symtxfl eamo from the sign used by the Lombard bankers, who took It from the inn iKu.ri t.r tho Mitlel fmnllr of Flor. ence. The founder of the house had" been a medicos or physician; his de scendants became bankers and brokers, and the sign they adopted waa baaed on tho pills that were dispensed by their ancestor. Aa they und Im-coiiic rich lu their colling It was necessary that the pills should express something more than the mere decoctions of a physician, so they were done In gold end in that shape the three '"pills" can be seen swlnglug over the premises of overy pawn-broker to-lny. The golden , pills were used as a coot of arms for tho descendants of the Medici family, who became nobles, but It Is not proba ble that any family of noble birth aud up-to-date Ideas has continued the use of three balls as Its heraldic device. Among the armies of tiashorn Indi viduals who dally seek the familiar red nud white sign of the burlier, few know the meaning of the partl-colors on the pide. Probably not one Iwirlior lu a hundred could tell you hluisel' what tho colors signify. The origin of the sign dates back to the days when bleeding was the favorite reme dy of physicians for most of the Ills that flesh Is heir to. Wheu a little blood-letting wna prescribed, the bar . her was tho man to do It, as he eoin ' bined the business of tonsorinl artist with that of surgeon. The barber's sign v. as adopted, as It Is In existence to-day, ticcause the red symbolized the blood that the borlior drew from his patients In the Interest of the public health, while the white on the poles stood for the white bandages with which the wound was Isiund up 1 nfter the clumsy operator bad drown ' the prescribed quantity of red fluid. flats Kat liFad Pipe. A rot has gained publicity In France by eating lend pipe, and that apparent ly without experiencing any 111 effects, lints have long been known as rapa cious feeders, so far as all things ani mal and vegetable are concerned, but lend pipe Is something new as a diet. The present Ituttance of pipe eating Is reported to Iji Nature by a gcntlcm-m named lenolly. M. Itennlly Is em ployed lu the glass works at (Jrande Vallee In the department of the lower Seine, France, He sent to I -a Nature pieces of the pipe and an explanatory uote, which translated reads this way: "I send you by mall a bit of lend pipe gnawed by rats. This pipe, which car ried water lu my laboratory, has beeu gun wed through In several places. Hu Se ller tubes have suffered In the same way. I bcleve this Is a pretty rare occur rence, and I thought I ought to let you know alsnit It." l.Aad Is general)- considered poisonous wheu taken internally, and pipes made of It are generally safe on that account. Hut It Is possible that the rots did not swallow the pieces they bit out and only attacked the pipes to get at the water which their Instinct told them was flowing ou the tuside. i I'nlque Way of Living. Odd aud remuuerative aveuuea of employment are constantly botug open ed up lu Cincinnati. Here Is one of the Utest: I A competeut stenographer, who ar rived from England a year ago, wos , unable to find work. One day, while reading the brief notices In the dally papers of the obsequies of a distin guished cltlxon, he was struck by the scout mention of "the touching aud elo quent tribute to the memory of the de ceased" delivered by the ofllclatlug cler gvnuin. , tie attended the next funeral at one of the swell churches, getting well down to tbe front of the church, where he took a full stenographic reort of the prayer and "eloquent tribute." A few days later he appeared at the home of the widow with a neatly typewritten copy of both prayer and sermon. He suggested that she would, no doubt, l'.ke to preserve, as a souvenir of the dear departed, tbe truthful and elo quent review of bla life, so beautifully I given on the occasion of bla obsequies. . " ' nr ir n nn 'WfifTf 1 i "" Th widow waa deeply Impressed, and almost bent a willing ear to the suggestion that a dozen or more copies vor'. I be a suitable remembrance to M-ud to absent relutlvcs or uear und dear friends. The young man was will ing to furnish twenty copies of the ser mon and prayer for 1. The widow, who was not supposed to know any thing alout the cost of typewriting, tl(oiiglit this a most reasonable offer. This waa the commencement of a prosperous business. The stenographer has been so busy at times as to require two assistants. lie recently attended a well wedding and took down the re marks of the olllelutlng divine at the wedding breakfast. The parents of th bride gave a liberal order for copies, find private welding reports will now Ih a regular feature of his business. To l his end lu- hns employed a young man of good social standing who can secure cards of admission to swell social func tions. C'lnclnnoil Tribune. A SMOOTH SWINDLER. He Boccitfd-d In Relieving Piimnel J. Handnll of a Thousand. One of the most daring operations of Francis J. Alvany. the cx-convlet. who has Just finished serving the legal part of a nine years' sentence In the Mary land penitentiary, was his swindling of the late Hon. Samuel J. Itaudatl, the great commoner of Pennsylvania. Mr. Ilondal! was sitting In the room of the Ways aud Menus C mlttee lu the Nil- tloimlCnpliolonc mornliig-so the story goes when a "Mr. Oeorge W. Chllds I.rexel" was announced. Mr. ltaiuhill told the attendant to show In the son of bis old friend, the Philadelphia banker, at once. "Why, bow do you do, my Isiyr said Mr. Itandall as a young man eutered the room. "How do you do, Mr. Randall? I'm awfully glad to see you, but 1 don't 1h lleve I'd hove had time to come to see you had not wanted something. I only stopped over In Washington to in tend to some busliiemi ror father ou my way south. I started to leave und I found that I didn't have any money. I've got a cheek, but 1 ne-d to Is? Identi fied. Will you Identify me7' "Why, certainly." wna the reply, "nut I'm very busy here and I hate to leave. Won't my check do as well? Yon can get that cashed at my hotel. How much do you wantr "One thousand dollars will do," was the answer. The great Pennsylvania!! drew his check, gave It to the young tnnn and the latter went out. Not until the uext day did Mr. Itandall know that he'd beeu swindled by "Hungry Joe. Then the real tieorge W. Chllds Drexel , culled and waa promptly shown the door. The mistake was finally explain-! ed. ond Mr. Handnll sold that he was not sure that It wasn't worth what It ciwt to know how easily be could be swindled. He said Alvany's make-up was perfivt O.nslder the glorious possibility of a mnu with such attainments. Philadel phia Times, ; rteyond the Ksncqulho. ! Any study of (iuliina must be from the delta of the Orinoco or along the many streams that Interlace the coun try. The reason Is obvious. The coun-' try Is almost as unknown as ninny re gions In the heart of Africa. There are no means of communication except the rivers, with here and there a few mule-, 'paths extending from the right bank of the lower Orluoco to the milling camps of the Interior. lu all this vast terii-' tory I doubt If there nre more than tweuty thousand Inhabitants. Nlne teuths of these ure wandering tribes of uncivilised Indians, who respect net llier law nor government. One man I met, who was faiulliar with the district, said that not over six thousand people 1 live lu the delta north and east of the Kssequlls) up as fur as Cludad Hull var; but In the F.ngllsh statement of the case, reference Is made to forty thousand Brtlisn iihjecl. The vast majority of the Inhabitants nre Indians ' ond half breeds, who never heard of Kuglntid. A friend of mine met Ser-' gen lit Barnes on Isniid n steamer, ami Itaines told him that the one Kligllsh family he iiersoiially knew of In his ' territory was an F.ngllshinan and bis i native wife nud half breed children. This population, however. Is n floating ; one. A native house noes not menu much work. When the iKUindnry line Is drawn. If the "forty thousand Brit ish subjects" do not lll;,i It. they can ' put themselves ond their gmxls Into a few canoes and move. Century. , Ittlrs t.alore. It appears that, of all the ruling sov ereigns In Kurope, the F.mperor of Aus tria can bonst the largest number of ti tles of nobility and territorial rank. Fronds Josepn, ticsldcs his Imperial crown. Is in nine different ways entitled to wear the regal tlnra, twice qualified to be addressed os Grand Duke, once as Grand Prince, four times as Mar grave, twice os Prince, ond In a multi tude of different rights as Count and liord. On the whob It would prohobly be no exaggeration to say that his ti tles of sovereignty and nobility amount In oil to considerably over o hundred. He Waa Cool. j A Massachusetts Congressman who I was on board the train which was1 wrecked at Hyde Park, Miss., last fall, , says that wheu the shix-k came, one of i the passengers was pitched over sev- ' erol soots Just lu time to receive the 1 conteuts of the water-cooler, which tipped over and soaked bis clothlug i,ti cq wHter. A highly excited pas senger rushed up to hlni aud told blm to i keep cool "Go away," said the wet man, "I am the coolest man In the car. I have Just hod two buckets of Ice- water emptied down my bock. Legal Items. On one oeooalou, eoousel In a certain draluog case submitted that the plain tiffs, the Sewage Localltatlon Com pany, had "no locus standi In this court." "Heaven forbid." was the fer vent ejaculation of the learned Judve. Something skin to this w os the answer , of the Judge when complaint was made t that a luckless process-server had been compelled to swallow the writ he hod endeavored to serve. "I hope," sold ( bis lordship, gravely, "that the writ was not made returnable In thla court." I Rare White W Uri Geese. A white wild goose waa receutly shot at Mathews Island. Maine. It Is sold that these species of geese are I very rare and quit valuable. SARGENT, THE ARTIST. Oo. of the Most rroml-ent Flr.. in tbe Modern Art World. The high reputation ' J'1'" sl"';r jtni.ut. ti.. uf ,llU T"!,rh;' work. mkc him one of II.- " roinluen. figures lu the modern wor d ,f art. No American artist hns occu . . v..n..,l oosiiiou as be has l-letl sucn mi , i tallied before reaching I,: 4ml, year, none is more celebrated In Paris of Ku- foil, nun me ... i... ...I ,.iiik of tl a best ... .i... ..ili. if uri ceim-i mne. lie n" ipe. lie u" " - 1 ..... (. .1 k!. ....... tlllil IJI ....Mi,iiM lu the I'lllled Stales, Caru.eucltu." tl'" l'l''"'r" ,,,,,h I"''1 I eu.a him in the famous Mi'...!"'"' Cullery In Paris, was painted in .e ,. " i ,1.... ...o.iiciv shown at the JS.VI, whither bla parents had gone to live some years before. Ills father was Dr. Fiu-lli'gh Kartell t, o Boston phy sician, and hW mother, whose uuild.'ii name was New hold, and who belonged to a well-knowo family lu Philadelphia, possessed the accomplish ut of paint ing very cleverly lu water colors. KJ il ea tod partly In Italy nud partly In ller muny, joung Sargent entered the Acad emy of Fine Arts ot Flou nce ot a eom- coal, and one summer, when he was lu cU.on not yet a peer and president of 'fiT Lidcluy. bu, a fi us Kugllsb artist notwithstanding, meet ing them, commended the tioy s worn, and counseled him to continue. The serious and earnest side of Sir geut's character always Impressed his fellow-students lu those Ijitlu Quarter days. He had no taste for dissipation, though he was by no means puritanical. Tbe lighter side of his temperament found satisfaction In music, the th '(iter, and literature, and In the keen oppre t lotion of everything lu the tastes ond amusements of the day that had a new or orlglual flavor. Though nn eager reader, he was not a bookman, but an olwerver. "Alert" is the adjective -.i.i,..,,,pi,nntieiei.ressesiheouali!y exniniiion oi ui" ... - - ..uu-iit much light ng ana suiienim Artists. Ills career ha- la-en a co . mne of 11M ..oDoll.an one .and his youth was pas.v ...Uht l o t ' j . .. ... . . a u,i it v nil i;i i' u" p. ! cd among "'n'-'-Miug- very IT e - m, , 8(op a I ,rom those .hat effect the " 1 , "ot conquest which we now per bent of unrnt An.eWau Is.ys ho Ih a Ivan 1 'tuUc Tlie M Wun. coino Inters and sculpto s , ' ,u 1870. when Sir lit will iHiru in rifi'-u" i . irii.i n m.tk-P ni.wvr panttlvely early W: '' ':" ; Htrlct drll and dls- ikii'Sk::::: : svu, subdued Me uaruiHi to pai i i , n,,.i:i1i)ori,. nd devastated vast welIUStOUraWWllilloepeu.il.... , of bis predominating characteristic. He ' white man. these less warlike tribe was quick to see, and ready to absorb, accepted the rule of thu Intruding et cveryihltig that struck blin no novel.-' tiers with scarcely a murmur, and. In Century. Washington's Knitmrrsssinriit. "But Washington took pains to suc ceed," says a writer In Harper's Magn sine. In telling of George Washington's life at home In Virginia. He had a great xest for business. No details es caped him when owe he was in the awing of the work. He was not ninny years lu leornlug how to make the best tobucco lu Virginia, and to get It recog nized as such In Fnglaud. Six months beforo Washington's marriage he had been chosen n member of tbe House of Burgesses for Fred erick County, tlia county which had beeu bis scene of adventure In tbe old days of surveying In the wilderness, and In which ever since Braddock's fatal rout bo bad maintained his hendqunrters, striving to keep the bor der against the savages. The young soldier was unused to as semblies, and Buffered n keen embar rassment to And himself for a space too conspicuous In the novel parlia mentary scene. He had hardly taken his sent when the gracious nud stately lloblnson, Speaker of the House and Treasurer of the Colony these twenty years, rose, at the bidding of the Bur gesses, to thank hlni for the services of which nil were speaking. This suddcii praise, spoken with gen erous waruith there lu a public place, was more than Washington knew how to meet. He got to hla feet when Mr. Speoker wos done, but he could utter not o syllable. He stood there, Instead, hot with blushes, stammering, oil a tremble from head to foot. "Sit down. Mr. Washington!" cried the Speaker. "Your modesty Is equal to your valor, and that surpasses the power of any language that I possess." To Assist Wa'cs. Queen Victoria has come to the as sistance of the Prince of Walci In con nection with the approaching marriage of his daughter, Maud, to Prince Carl, of Denmark. She has not only defray ed the entire cost of thu trousseau, but : up ,lmt lial)lt lf they kuew tn injury ulso settled upon the Princess the sum ' ,0 ,lle ncry ot the fingers that might of $otHi,tHK). which will give her au In- a0('n' therefrom, dependent Income of $3),Ooo a year. T1' crnc1' ta caused by the temporary The Queen has done the same for each lllsI,,(,atlu ot the Joint, and each time of her own daughters. She would have ; tnls 0Qcnn the nerves lu that part are done likewise for the Duchess of Fife ' offectel In 'uch a manner os to Increase hud not the Duke Indicated hlo prefer i tnelr Irritability, or, In other words, ince of toklug his royal wife without j tne,r HohUlty to be stimulated Into ony dowry or settlements from her own actlon aul induce the muscles to act at relatives, asking only In return that he tne Hfhtest cause, fchould uot be compelled to follow the I If tne Practice Is continued, this Irrita example of Lord Lome and keep up a to ccentuated as years go by, royal household of equerries ami ladles an1 many 01(1 nen, who have loot In a In waiting for his wife. Of course, the rent mwure the control of their fin Trlnce of Wales was supposed to pro- gen which can often be seen trembling, vide for his daughters wheu, a few : owe thal affllctlon In no small degree to years ogo, a sum of IJOO.OHO was added ,hli pernicious hoblt of cracking the to the allowance which be received 1 hnger Joints. from the nation. But his financial em- j barrassments are so great that he finds An Enterprising Woman. It difficult even to pay the allowance of 1 Miss Millard, of Teddington, has been the Duke of York out of this sum. much ln lle business of buying and seU'ng less provide for his daughters. Aud so onythlng for which there Is a market the Queen has to step In and furnish j for about fifteen years. She has dealt the settlements which have beeu'd, ' In horses, oil paintings, Instruments of manded by the parents of tho bride- clcnce and torture, playing card groom.-Chlcogo ltecord. , pearl, old-fashioned firearms and fans' n dials, carrloge gates, laces, books! Valuable Greek Coins. j olographs, coins, medals, antlques-ln Sir Edward Buubury's mairniflefln 1 fact, there Is no end tn tho iu. f"Upf.,,Llf. GrH'k co"" for ever H2.000 In an eight days' sale lately In Loudon. uiu uignest prices were $l03 for a Rymcuse demaratelon of 4o0 B. C. with o head of Nike. crowned with olive, commemorating the great victory at the Hlmera. tl.. rarest of Greek coins; f .inn for a deko- drachm of Mmon. with a head of Peme- phone; ftttts for a stater of Ells, havlui on It an eagle with a hare In It claws ! A tetradrachm with a head of Arethusa ' brought H02; a gold stater of Taren- i turn, with the bead of Demeter, J&Ve a tetradrachm of Thurll. with h'e-td of Athena, having ber helmet adorned with the figure of Skylla. one of Agrlgentum. with two eagles standi ever a uplne hare, UM. What a howl there would be If th girl, had ,o work half hard for poor wage a. they work to -ur. wo Ws mul ria Nenr1, All the lUrd Flthtlnr fl.s Item with the Zulu lr.be. For us the curiulu rises upna the K illr peoplo when the Dutch settlers, spreading slowly eastward from the neighborhood of the Cape, came Into (.im,act, and presently Into conflict, .vltli them. Hostlll'c llrst broke out In K7! and In the century thnt followed there oro reckoned no fewer than Dlno Katlr wars. The nnMves fought with lieiveness coniirable to that of North Ymerlcan Indians; nud though less hkilled In the ""'" of 'l"'K" ,,r' prise tiny were not less swift In their movements, or less fenrl,a In meeting deiiih. Had the policy of the colonial I i r-.iiernni ent lieen firmer ami mora ii. i pile Frere a more formidable thau any which bad yet been ncouutetod by Brills!, trxqu tl at of the Zulus. The Zulu ore a brand! of tbe Bantu ru" ciiilMout for I'lelr courage, th'.-ir phvslcHl urcr.gth. ond their absolute, submission to thel king. Tshakn. tbe able and relentless chief who reigns f.r about twenty years, and was mur dered by hta brothers In bad by I phew, Cetewsyo, when the wnr broke - out In WW wos, the headof ananny of 80.000 men, and Inflicted a serious defeat upon the Britten force before be waa finally overthrown aud bla country brought under British away. After his fall there remained ouly two strong native kingdom south of tbe Zambezi. One of these kingdoms, that of Loben gula. king of the Matabele, waa con quered lu 1803 by the British South African Company; and the other, that of Gungunhana, whose territory lay northeast of tbe Tronsvoal Btate, has within the lost six wontha (December, 1805, ond January, ISO'),) perished at the bonds of the Portuguese. With many tribes there baa boon no fighting ' ot all. Awed by the boldness of tbe many coses, looseu on ineiu u iiiun.-te ors. .Nearly ail tne uaru nguting in South Africa has been with tbe Zulus, to whom the Matabele belong ethno loglcolly. ond with tbe Xosa clans on tbe south coast, while the Bechuanas aud Ba-Rolongt and tbe Tongas, and the tribes of Mosbonaloud aa far aa the Zambesi, have, as a rule, submitted promptly and quietly. Century. What a Bicycle havos. The "literary bureou" feature of the bicycle factories has come to be one of the essential parts. The contributions which tbey send out to the newspapers ore sometimes among tbe mo-it beau tifully pathetic that find their way to tbe waste paper baskets. Ouio '.n a while, however, one of tbe bureaus sends out an "ortlclo" of true value -to tbe factory at least Here Is one of them: "No Investment pays at:ch high In terest os the money paid for a bicycle. The overage rider eaves 20 cents a day In corfore, soy five days a week for fifty weeks In the year, or a saving of aud if hu own a high-grade wheel he will have bud to pay nothing for re pairs, thus obtaining a return of SO per cent, upon his orlglnnl Investment. Should be wish to obtain a new mount be can, If he has been careful of bis wheel, sell It for half the price, which, with the $50 It has earned In car fares alone, will have given him bis year's riding for nothing. This is exclusive of nil doctor's bills, or tho various little expenses that go out for medicines dur ing the year, railroad fares usually ex pended for short pleasure trips and like expenditures." It begins to look as If bicycles would soon begin to rival tbe bank as a place to save up money. Don't Crack the Finger Joints, Many people have the habit of bend lug ond pressing down the fingers till n sound something like a crack la emit ted from the Joints; but they would lve 1 once flight a church, and also bought !and sold the gates of Hampton court : ' "n tne late Frank Marshall ! f,lltr of the Henry Irving Shaksoeiro' ; traded a sapphire ring for . sow nd litter of nine pigs. She boa a eroit 1 funcy for curios, an.t w ,ii.,... clud some very rare articles-London ' Globe. iou.m Hi Kabttltnte. Dobson-Goln1 to get my wife a png. Hobson-What for? Dobson-Why, .he .ay, she want. It foi company while I am .way at busi ness. What are you grlnulng at? Comniercial Advertiser. Where tbe Paper Go-e. Pftner.niatrArai oii. . i.i t.,r..., nt u- . tils military laienis, tracts or counirv, uusm-' ." .,,.i " . """an mat tbe con- It, 1 51!" for book onl, It. Ur. .L f ?" entlre ma"acture. S 0.,0, w f the p,per ; Din n0 In the form of wrapping d- Wr or paper for th Mw.paper pT uou i ,. historical romance Uhl T. .! a in. village of Norton Fn u. Ilcnth jl . Co. tbe rarloua British means "una of a chart u,'' '-nt of England's fw Z? rnt sc Paul n-'urget'sdlsnu,. lisher has had tluM.a., on.. f I.- . ' of !.. .... . ,,., ii,..,..., a bill compel!,,,,, ,,!,';" 'K. ouo centime stiimn ,.n l "fa. ery book they p,-,. at)i Tbe inueh-iliNciivu,..i nient Is not to bo erected it n after all, but prulu.t.i. I'reytng. library ,Lorl ' for 220.MIO marks, am P. that some Ameiiem. i..... . nK the purchnser. Tho first volume of "Sod.. edited by II. D. TrallU . poor In London. I.,h. o dozen writers of Ul)le Salisbury 'd Vmum the period from thenp,i.i. I. to the battle of Waterloo. Clodey's Magazine begin, voluino of the famous oil Z that Interested the niothofV"' vai generation under tli tltUT ey's Ladles' Book. Itua,! Its Individuality os a -hZ tlioilgu It fins, wisely widened Its field. W tor,, Tho third annual report of a, l, Crernr legacy to the AoierlmjlS School Union shows that la ivT yeors 155 now Sunia, uloZ been orgnnlzod nud 51)0 t-i. 5.228 pupils brought Into then 10 per cent, of the school, tutti produced churches. One more volume of tbe -Jowa!. Edmund do Coiieourt" U IMrJ covering the years from 1KQ ttitt "Lea Gouoourt" have it Inm, the distinction of being tbe most p, ent and artistic gossip and ohronM, of amnll beer In the contort. Tw Jules died In 1S7U It hs.aUijiJ "les (Joucouit" with tbe twu trot-' aud always will be. Gladstone lias written to tn. West, the author of "Tlie Unmi England,'' thus: "1 appredin ft honor yon do 'the 00110117 to til literary notice of the ciirlonmiv of the lnureofeolilp. There k tie history connected wltb It It iat ways to have been a dliBcultj. U cllned to advise filling It op. TUt Salisbury has done otherwise Dr. Stodnrt Wolkot bu wrlnec e Introduction to the new Toluntif, lected poems by hi uncle, ft Blnckle, In w hich he tells id m of a time wheu Blackle tlnlieluEi Inblirg editor and mentioned tk 1 bad lectured the previous !s Scottish home rule. "1 am turn said the publisher, "at your to! for making an exhibition of jra? Prof. Blackle turned on bit M t j slammed the door after blm. Vm ly be come bock, thrust blstwdlia sold: "Do you know, tbat'ijsrin my wife tells me." Andrew W. Tuer has flniilljtiK ed bis exhaustive "History olikHfl Book," which appears lntsfoip volumes. Mr. Tuer'. ImM'tlp'.li searches have succeeded ln trariJt 5 bom-books in place of tbe eight st f. previously supposed to remain lis Istence. The earliest record Mt.T has found of a real horn book t. wltb a sheet of Iron li wot m though this torment of tbe British r. wos not generally used until tbe rt of tbe sixteenth century. Twoorti veara aco an Imperfect simliatiiot - specles of text-book waa tell tot-l land for $325. And now come even tbe h" also and denose. s.iylns: Cawd1 blcvclo craze. As the book tr" peuds upon sedentary rather thai : ... . , .l.A M..il'Pf perauitiuiotory nanus, i" " probably not Altogether of thelo.. Hon. But It Is Just as well to Me tho l.Hirht lde ond to Mle iilinti lha nrospllt fad bus pa"1 acute otnge It will have built BP"1 general Incrense of vigor .1. .....,.i r.i- m.iru books Iban ev fore. But they will not be booh" the George Egerton or Oram w brand. fjoortrn Haven Putnam pwr0"" ..-t... viJn nnilfin for Ity of the paper used In reeem 1 peon books. Hesnyalttodwn dec-Hue of Moslem fanatlrlf" i,.,. f the MiMllterraB W..-10.1.. e niiLPim. iixed to crof'" dreary deserts on their WT ? ni.,tt,...i In fine linen. il sands died by the wayside, trt ... 1....... m strip 11 a prontnme ubhi - ji Iwdies of their linen tot the European paper mills. N l lem Is losing faith and th P are losing tnetr wv grade of paper. . r n.h. The a' time to tne qnrm.v.. - - of life of AMb, ond he found tbjt dlnary corp. If not would live 500 years. I b w .. .. ,.i 1,0 atnted that UK" . OU tne buiijch - i.-inriuH" I now living in tbe V-i"J, Russia, several carp tnai "'"a, be BOO years old. and he ba t, . . ... that M'W I in a numner 01 -- ,lfSli . 0110 vpnrs old. er" 10 00 ui 1-1 j 1 1 iivh he ba. In Baltimore boon gold M fc. for sixty-three years, jnd Unformed blm that ho had . 1. da cave a lu ! rorty years ! ! i-.Hlrtfll. i An American -- ,,,, The BrltUsh med.col mist M ducting a crusado again- 3 practitioners In ufi( Bridgewaier, n.B -. .. py :...:.n .ttifiillv ond in''' , mw.'""i' ... ,; , i- a dacwr r.. scntea nmi"- ,0i cine." A.Pr.Brldgews'er to be tbe possessor of d. gre York and Phlla.lelr'""; ;1,,, of international reputatl . w not only lost ii - , nP.rlyH cost to an aggregate of neny Boston Herald. ' . . v ... .hould ever ft "' .tory to delude people, they . It o that It ring. !r w P Uvu.