I t BAN DON RKCOllDEH. MEASURING MEDICINE. Plncen Where They Still Take a Diiueful nit a l)or. A :n:in went into :i Now York drug store ::tul asked tin clerk for :i remedy for indigestion. Tlie elerk sifted a pink powder into tlie scales. -Take a heaping dhneful of this," he said. "It will brills you around all right." Tlie man's astonishment wa.s almost powerful enough to drive away the In digestion witliout the aid of the pow uor. "A diiiKfTil V he ejaculated. "Whal kind of a newfangled system of meas urement Is that you have here";" "It Isn't new." replied the elerk. "And it Is very simple. Just take a dime and pile as much of this powder on it as will stick. That will he the proper dose. You couldn't set It any more exact if you measured for half an hour with scales and spoons." "Well," said the customer, "this is a now one on me." Then he proceeded to measure out a dose of the pink powder. As he did so a man standing close bo- side him sighed reminiscently. "It makes me feel voting to see you do that." he said. "They usiil to meas ue mxeu,,- , ...i ... m , . 1 . U-ii. I Kiiitiiiii! ninilcm Mimleinees h:iil - driven all those old methods of meas- iir.,n,..t ,uit .r 11... t.,.i,u..t Not at all." said the clerk. "Theft are lots of plait's; where they still take medicine by the dimeful." MANAGEMENT OF WIVES. What the Tactful lluslmnU Dor When III Helpmeet Weepi. One tiling the tactful husband does Is to let his wife cry. I don't mean that he drives her to crying or that he lets her weep while he stands unsym pathetically by with his hands in his trousers pockets, his feet apart and grinning sardonically. I mean that wnen an emotional woman needs a good cry he realizes that it will relieve the tension. He docs not got up and rage about and kick footstools out of tne way and say. "Uh, tor heaven s sake, stop crying or you'll drive me to drink!" No. He goes and pnts her shoulder soothingly and says: "There, little woman! I'm sorry thi cook has left and your new gown hooks up crookedly, but cheer up. I.ei' r . . 1 l .... . . .. 1 : . l : . I titi uui .11111 ii!ie si nine uiiuier. 1 and tomorrow 1 11 write that tador a letter that will make his hair curl." Then she looks up through her tears and thinks how handsome and li : it- strong and glorious he is. ami U-ioiv the dinner Is over she has thoulr two ways m wiueii to economize an so pay for the extravagance of !. order to the waiter, for the con. 11.0:1 purse Is not elastic, and she know it LIHan Hell in Harper's Bazar. THE ANCIENT DRAGON. It Xenrent He pre tentative nv the Knut liolliin Tree l.lr.nril. The pteriKlactyl. whose fossil r mains have been found In the chalk at Cambridge. England, and elsewhere with a very varied spread of winss, which In the largest sp.vhnens must have reached twenty-live feet. Is al most Identical with the dragon of fable. A bat-like creature, with an elevate! bodr and lon neck ending in an ah surdly small head with a portent. u ueaic. 11 coum run very swiniy. was a . . ... 1 fish eater, and could swim, or it th-w uy means 01 imge memiiram.us w.ngs. - . .1 which connected it long fore quarters with Its hind legs. J lie nearest representative now ot the ancient dragon is the tree lizard of the East Indies, which resembles Its fossil ancestors in form, but is in finitely smaller In size. The ptero- dactyl Itself, however, evidently ex- Isted down to a comparatively recent rfnln"iei 1 T.ori.-til ?itiil it ic nor ?it -ill I e 1 - - improbable that the traditional dr:go,, i ll'T'M 411MII I.ISi. II till.. I " ' 1 I ...... ... mens, as met with bv primitive man.- t ti ....1. The "vu.iom of Untie. A ladv and her little daughter were walking throu'jli Grosvenor square when they came to a portion of the road strewn with straw. "What's that for, ma?" said the child, to which the mother replied. "The lady who lives in that liousc. my dear, has had a little baby girl sent to her." The child walk ed along for a few yards and then. turning and nodding at the straw, said. "Awfully well packed, mar- St. James Gazette. Sympnthet le or OI hcrxi, li-e. "Oh, just listen to me." finally ex claimed Mrs. Chatters self reproach fully, "annoying you with all this talk about Mrs. Nexdore's shameful treat ment of me and all my other troubles:" "Not at all. my dear." replied the man rather ambiguously. "I'm glad to hear It." Philadelphia Press. 1 111 ! In i;. "I'll have you know that I belong to Chicago." said the stranger. '"Deed, an' wha'd hae thocht It?" quoth the skeptic Scot. "Frae the wey ye'vu boon speaking 1 thocht Chicago belonged tae you." Glasgow Times. I'nttlnc: Him Ulcht. "Next time I marry." said the widow cr, "I'll get a wife I can make shut up.' "You don't want a wife." replied his friend. "What vou want Is a folding bed." Houston Post. A Shyloek. Little Elmer-Papa, what is a Shy lock? Professor P.roiidhead A Shy lock, 1113 son. Is a man who is called so by the people to whom he lends money because he expects them to pay it back. Town Topics. A Hard HlnfT to .'lake. The very best poker players look as If they were caught stealing sheep when they go to explain to their wives how sorry they are they've got to go away on business. New York Press. It In Voice Chniipliur. Ethel How funny your brother' voice sounds now! Edith Yes. papa Biii'S he's outgrown all his clothe and now he's outgrowing his voice, I guess. Yonkers Statesman. DLLY LARKIN care w nat you or anvixKiv nresellii, or at least the majority of nr. H is uie o.eopuoi. am. uoi ine rule witeii vou imi it otherwise. Now, for instance, I have a friend who is acknowledged to be one of the pret th-t little women in the place where ii maui.igi. ne . one ... uie nearest nine inoi.ieis :.. .1... I I l . i . i i ir ... u.e u.i.i nas .lonieu ner.-o.i evcrvt hinir for her ebildren and thci . - - - - - worsiup ner. Her liushami, However, is one of the mot scllish men in exist euce. lie thinks of hiniM'lf lirst. last ... ... ..... ami all tlie time, lie bemoans hi, fab to his friends that he has so large a family and think it is a positive mi foitune. He i the meane.-t and most vindictive man around homo you ever saw positively ugly, crabbed and oro.s unless some one comes in. and then he put on Iu company manners and is as itlable and pleasant as any one could imaiTlllC. lie take 111 all the baseball lm.s ., huY uw wlu1 ,u, ean, . .. . . f , V" v ' -. pu ts up a lit t Ie iiuniey 'for t he oxci to- "lent of the thing, a he terms it and to make it more intorcMing. (Iocs to the theater occasionally to keep up his spirits, and the remainder of bis even- nigsare Usually spent with convivial friend f his own stamp. He drinks like a lih, but i never what you would eat. a-iuai.y urui.K. 1 111 same man 1 . .11 . 1f- I I. MM . a mad as an aimrv hornet if he doe not find his w ife at home when ho ar- rives, winch is verv seldom, 1 assure you He neglects her in everv wav. and yet i insanely jealou if anyone bo- stow an atlmirimr ulance unoii her. :ind yet if he w:is one-third as bad and imliHereiit a- he is she would have ad mirers galore. You know there is an old saving that Some dav the worm will turn.' You may tread upon it and abuse it, but things finally reach a crisis, and then look out. That day is coming into that woman life, and when ii doe she i going to hate him :i much a she ever loved him. He ,,JU. lJu. Uoo, , 1 . , . ,.. . n.-. .1 iK'iiiin I'lil.ise, illlliwiiii ;ui t ei true one. but w hen once her eyes are opened hen heaven have niercv on him. He will want to crawl on his knee then, but it will In too late. It will ere him right, too, Polly. "1 wauled her to go out for a little outing the other dav: she needed it badly, for her beautiful grav eve.- looked faded and she had a racking cough for week. What she needed was a littl. change of air. If it was mil v for a few hours it would have been a change of ceiieaud have taken her out into tin suiisiiiiie. ne would nave -eon new t- ..1 fac on the trip, and would have en joyed the llower III all their glory 111 the pretty count rv town 1 wanted to take her to. Ik, vou think she would go.' Ao, .-he must be at home when Fred came: he never liked to have her away when meal time came, and then another thing, .-he really couldn't all'oni ii. an 1 lumni a; 1 twriaimou. no . ... ....I you Know your bu.-band spend double . llv,le that amount everv week for " 1 ,:.. mvn i,-1In. .,,,,1 ,.v(.,. ibiu- f I I - - - - ------ - you, toiling and slaving at home? 'Oh, I ... I - - tl I I 0111 ne w oiks so nard in-says no must have -onie pleasure.' she reiilied. I imply wanted to shake that little worn- in for the simpleton that she was, but m-lcad I tried to control my temper and said, 'Ha- to have these pleasures becau - . - he ha- to work o hard. 11. 1 .1 , ., . , nas never seen uie nay mat no 11a , , , .. , , . . .11 e 1 1 just a great big bump of pure and 1111 . . . . 1 ' aduitemted selh-hiics. lled.enot If. .1 y 1 j . Know tne name oi eii-aeritice. Old .......... .1 1 . 1 . 1 I vot. evei see uie nay mat no planned 1 . . . anything tor your pleasure that he wa.- not counted 111, the head and fore- 1110-t one of all he had 111 view? t oil can May at homo and cook and wa.-li, and .-crub and mend, economizing, and lor what: to give him more nioiiev l. . ... -pel id on him.-eif and hi oul-ide plea ure--. 1 tell you, roily, a man 1.- not half a man 111 an honorable .-oii-c of the word who treat- hi wife a.- this man does. He would hoot her if .-he n;i- uiuiii 01 ji.iii 1111- ne u.iiiK- r 1... if ,1... .1.: 1... .1 .1- he i- ju-lilicd in doing. "I often think what would be the ro- ult if wive.- who have worked hard day in day out, ami you might just a. well include half the night, for that ir aiMtui tne extent umi malt v women 1 .... 1 . . 1 have to work to keep the machinery of the home moving smoothly, if they boubl feel that 'hey were entitled to run to the Im.-eUtll game.-, to the mat inee, to lecture-, etc., and in.-i.-t upon taking those little per.-oiial plea-ures regard le-s of e.K-u-e ami wholly indif ferent a.- to whether their liu.-baud.-liked the idi-n or not. 1 low would thev like it if their w ivrs had to run to muiio friend.- two or three nights in tlie week leaving them home to look after the children and to make it a.- pleasant for the wee folk.-a- poible? They would not feel very much elated, do you think, lo know that their company wa-. not -utllcieiitly pleasant to make tiling-hi attractive that they would be willing to spend their evening-in their (onipaiiy in-tead of seeking it on the outside. "This Ia.-t is one of the humiliating faults this man I have been telling you nliout poss.5-.-es 111 one of its worst phase.-. His wife is as pretty as a pic ture, and a brighter and more at trac tive little woman you will ne'er Iiud. I often think that there is method in his madne.-.s in not taking her out more, for lie is ot a jealous disposition, ami she is lovely, witty and such an agreeable . 1 companion that men admire her very much and enjoy her society. He is is D simply miserable, ami does not have much of a good time when betakes her out, for he keeps watching her all the time, ami yet she Is never guilty of any thing that he can limi fault with. If he was one-half as loyal to her as she is to him they would be the happiest cou ple imaginable. I Ie has his irood i.uali it . t., .i ;r i i.i ...i.. , - n i i i ttiiiiiu ni nil Lri himself more thimrs mifhl b vi-rv dillerent in that little family; but he is .rUty )f things all the tin... Ih..,f he or In,. ,,.i,.,. man would condone in their wives She has been as true as steel to him, ami he has never been true to her L5lu.0 th(ir W0(hnn ,r u. . ,, lias deceived her from the start and vet H. expects her toovcrlook nil bis short comings. 'Tis a noor rule that doesn't - .. - ! - .... t ,. . itui n 1 11 nil 1 iiiii 1 'miii 1 iniii'i.' u0, too. I r 1 Lot anyone expose a man s uncnvia- hle traits and his bad faults which are unjustifiable, and he savs they have humiliated him ami he nearly .lies from indignation at the party who has been -o uiikiihi. et thev never stop to think that they are humiliating (licit wives, families and friends bv their ... I actions. 1 hat when they tell them the blackest of falsehoods to wriggle out of some serane that thev . -ire doimr t hem t ho greatest in juM ieo. Thev know . I ih..t 1 1. 1... y u. u.c socrot , but that sooner or later the truth is bound to be revealed, and when that time comes respect ."lid con fidence is bound to wane, yet they will keep on fibbing regardless of the const queiiees. 1 hey want their wives' lives an open book, they want the pages of their lives sealed and placed under I 1....I. .....1 I. I ... .1 'oeu ;uiu ue.v, 0111 in ncariv everv 111- slam o the truth, sooner or later, will bt I made known 1 BRIEF RHVIKW. Views oi Another World. Though the fishing and catching i full of excitement, there i a unictor charm and delight in sailing over Nep tune s domain in a gla--bottom boat, writes Nellie Blessing Kvster. in Four- T I'ra' k News. on have never tried HV Then you have missed a novel and a wondertul experience. The dav we went out the water was so clear that one could see through a deolb of (ill or nioiefcet. Such an aoiiarium! Amid tangled forest of seaweed of all pri.-- 1 ... nin'ie lines lloated the inhabitants m Ii a couglomeiatioii of shape ami color! What eiidle varietv! Tbin we' e -1 range con-le Mai ions of sImi-IiIi- p:d tinted jeliy-h-h, rimmed and f fit god with tentacles like beaded dew- nn-p-; sea-cucunueis more delicately constructed than strands f woven 1 l a.. gla ; sea-urchin-, spiked like porcu-piii'.-, with whom even a merry inei ma.d would not care to llirt; abalone aim octopi clinging to the emerald tir fac -of rocks that 110 human hand has ever touched and gold perch and angel-li.-l. that Hashed for an instant like an electric spark, ami then were lo-t in ocean caves. The light was emi-iho- P1'"'"1 ''" - Toolings awakened tho-e of wonder, awe and admiration in po-iblo to convey toauothei. Royalty and Finger Bowls. In entertaining rovaltv manv re trie- ti ns must be observed. One of tin stiangc-t of these unwritten law- ! - ,i, 1, r....i.s.i. ,1... ..r . ill oim IIP II - 1 f 1 linger bo.vls at dinner for anv of the guest? . . . ox opt the roval ones. his custom da efrom the carlv dav-of th. .'i.ni-.r,. vvleii the noble- were divided in their allegiance between the reigning hoii of lanover and the exiled Stuarts. To many of these nobles allegiance to the St 1. art- w:is a religion, and often the outward acts of allegiance to the reign ing -o reign wore perverted intotrea- sonible acts of homage to the exiles Ne dinner was complete without its toa-l to "the King," in tho-e days, to 1 . .. ova le winch wa an act oi treason pun- i-h.-sble even with death and lo,s of tit ! and e.-tates. The Jacobites, hovv- cvei , di-covcred a w ay toavuid thi.- peli ally without -acrilicing their loyalty I luMing the wine gin-.- over the tin got bow I, thev drained the gla.-s to "the King." with a menial reservation "over the wat r." Thi.- simple ru.-e was soon diM'ovei'ed, ami uieu.-eoi linger iiowir wa.- forbidden. First Land Sale on Record. The fu-t ale of land of which there iany denude record itiial mentioned in the tv eiity-third chapter of ( leiiesis. The transaction mviiis to have boon very -inijile. Abraham wi.-hed to buy a lield for a burial place for his family. Kphfoii, the owner of the lield, valued it at Uh shekel- of silver, about 6-00 of our money, winch Aiiraliam agreed to pay. 1 lo accordingly wont to the gate of the citv and weighed the nioiiev, which he paid in the presence of all who entered through the gate. This simple ceremony, without the inter vention of lawyers or other ollicials, made "the field and the cave lliat was therein and all the trees that were in the field, and in all the borders around iboiit," sure unto Abraham for a pos session. Wives Displace Dogs. The Emperor of Annum Uses his w ive- to retrieve t he game lie .-hoots. roniet lines a wife is drowned m swini- niing after a bird and .-onielinies one is accidentally shot, but the imperial ha rem is large. v Advertising; the shortcomings of oth ers docs not help us to dispose of our own. flic force of love is more ellective thai, the fence of a law. Everv time vou think of another a million angels think of vou Courage is simply knowing; "when it wise to be af laid SPOILED A DUEL. The Scheme Senator I.ninitr Worked to Prevent tin lCneounter. I Miring the course of a heated debate (.11 -e in the house of representatives sharp words were exchanged between congressman from New York and one from .Mississippi. A challenge was de livered and accepted, and as both were courageous and determined a bloody meeting seemed imminent. Friends in terposed, but lit vain. Both men were resoiute. and neither would yield to the suggestion of an amicable arrange ment. As a last resort Senator Lamar was called In to save the situation. lie realized tluit no ordinary methods would serve his purpose, iiud so re sorted to strategy. The principals in the proposed duel are still living, so will tall the New Yorker Jones and the Mi-sissippiati Smith. ; . u.Uur Lamar called on the New Yorker, and after the usual civilities had been exchanged he said: "Jones, I've come here to do you lrieudly turn. I know that you and Smith are determined to tight and that nothing will stop you. I have not come as a mediator, but simply to mitigate, if possible, the horrors of a fatal end, so lar as you are concerned. As to Smith, 1 have no fears. He is a dead shot and can take care of himself, but he is not an unfeeling man, and Is In clined to respect any partiality you may have in favor of any particular part of your anatomy. Some men en ti-r.-dn mortal dread of being dis ligured after death, and If the choice were left them would prefer not to hu wounded in the eye or mouth or cheek bone. Now. If there is any particular spot that you would like to have Smith's bullet enter he has commis sloiicd me to say that your wishes will be respected." This extraordinary proposition stag gored the Now Yorker. Even his un doubted courage did not stand so se vere a test, and he paled visibly. After he recovered his composure he replied that he would confer with his second. and Mr. Lamar, after an Impressive farewell, took his leave. Tlie tip was given to friends of tlie principals and new negotiations en tered upon. The duel did not come off. amar's device had succeeded. New Orleans Times I lomocrat. TIME FOR SCOTLAND. llnll on (lite 1 1 1 1 1 IlnipN When Cannon on Another In Kireil. "Speaking of clocks." said the travel er. "Edinburgh. Scotland, has the most iniorosiiug time marking device 1 ever snv. The city lies between two hills. tn o!i of those, known as Carlton hill, lln re is an observatory tower, in the top of which a large black ball is sus pended. Across the valley, probably a mile away, is Castle hill, .surmounted by the historic Edinburgh castle. One of the large guns in this fortress, point ing toward Carlton hill, is electrically couiic tetl with the Oall in the tower a mile away. Every evening at ti o'clock the gun is tired, and at tlie same mo ment the ball falls. The device sets the otlicial time for all Scotland. "It is interesting to stand on Carlton hill at the appointed hour to see the simultaneous llash of the gun on Castle hill and the fall of the hall close at hand, while the roar of the gun Is of course some moments in crossing the valley, tin the other hand. It Is equal ly interesting to stand beside the big gun at dusk to watch the ball at Carl ton hill fall Just as the shot Is tired. I recall once standing in the courtyard of the castle, watch in hand, waiting for the cannon Just overhead to be tired. It occurred to me it would be more exciting to watch the crowds of passing people, especially since not one was apparently thinking of the shot from the cannon. When the roar look place, absolutely without warning, hardly a yard above the heads of the crowd, the scene well repaid my wait ing. Everybody dodged. Children screamed, and men and women Jumped to the side of the wall. Of course it was all over in a second, but In that moment it seemed that an electric shock had passed through the crowd." Birmingham News. THE TRICKY GROUSE. Mr linn lIunilre.ilM of Devleen For KluilliiK the Hunter. The grouse has a hundred tricks of defense. It will lie still until the hunt er is within a yard of It. then soar straight upward in Ids front, towering like a woou;ck; again, it will rise for ty yards away, and the sound of Its wimrs is his only notice of Its pres inee. It will cower upon a branch under which he passes, and his cap will be not more than a foot below It as he goes, and, though It has, seen hhn ap proaching. It will remain quiescent In fear until his back Is turned. It will rush then, and when he has slewed himself hurriedly around he will catch only a glimpse of a brown broad wing far away. Wounded and falling In the open, It will be found if It Is found at all with the telltale speckles of Its breast against the trunk of some brown tree, against which Its feathers are Indis tinguishable, and the black ruff about the neck of the male will he laid against the darkest spot of the bark. Often It will double like a fox; often as a man draws near It will spring noiselessly Into some spruce and hide until he passes, dropping then to tho ground and continuing Its feeding; of ten, too. It will decline to take wing, though unhurt, and will run fast for half a mileso fast that the most ex port woodsman will be unable to keep pace wish it. This It will only do on leafy ground and never when snow would betray Its tracks. Outing. The Cnune of the Trouble. "What is tlie matter with that ba by?" growled an irascible husband as the little one persisted in howling and kicking to the extent of his little might. "The matter Is, sir," calmly replied the wife as she strode up and down the room, "the matter Is that this baby In herits your temper." And the husband returned to his pa lor with a gloomier look than before. A Ileuinrlcnble Fcnt. Old Salt - oh. the ocean's a big place, dearie! Why. niany's the time I've stood for three days on one tack, and-- "My sal; os. grandpa! I hope you had your shoes on!" Ilrooklyn Life. NEW SHORT STORIES Thi Happened In Cork. They were comparing notes and tell ing incidents of recent trips abroad, when a charming daughter of the Em erald Isle, who was sittii: . dreamily in the corner, apparently taking no inter est in the conversation, suddenly chirped in with the following: "All of which reminds me of an in cident which happened while I lived in Cork. There poulterer's stores are scarce because of the proximity of the country, but a coal heaver of my ac quaintance, owing to the illness of his wife, was anxious to secure a fowl In a hurry. So ho strolled along Patrick street in a forlorn hope of some sort of success, and when he came to a tax idermist's, whose window displayed an owl under a glass case, why, poor Paddy thought that here wa.s the end of his quest, so he entered ..and In quired: "'How much for the fat faced hln In the windy':' " 'That's no hen,' the surprised shop man answered. 'That's an owl.' " 'Yerrah.' whispered Pat, 'shure, I don't care how ould she Is. 'Tis for soup I wants her!' "New York Times. Fljcuretl on n Wife. T'ncle Joe Is an old negro on a farm near Chesapeake City, Md., a farm owned by the family whose slave he was years ago. He is a widower and lately has spruced up to a degree. Not long since one of the young men of the place started for the eiiy, when he was hailed bv Fncle Joe. "tl:t;ili ( Iciif'K " lit 'i5il liinn!clilv , TV . . you none gom 10 town: 1 ou migiu I do a favor fob me." 'W.m I ''I -'"" ' wsis the response, ..A'-,, . . . . -r ,mv "p"" , "" U,L " nmrnage license toh me. I ill- v him- Ulilll illUWM.'U. Ulll, ...... . , A 1 t 1 , ttlJKUill u tl Mil 111V ing that he old negro was oflended. he ,.Uchon dn jlso r, ;II,..p,t;,U',1,C,r' snn Vel;of the young people is supposed to I 1 get It and rode oh. J br,ls ,1JjIf fl (,o7on After attending to his own affairs m eontrIl,nt5on bel , u town he suddenly remembered the 11.1s DONE ASK MANDY marriage license, but was nonplused, J for he had not asked the name of I"n- ole Joe's fiancee. He happened to rec ollect that he had noticed I'luie Joe around the kitchen a good deal of late i and that Amanda, duskv. fat ami for- i ty and the be-t cook In the county, 1 t always had a delectable morsel reserv ed for the old man. so of course It must be Amanda. Armed with t lie happy credentials Mr. Oeorge galloped home and handed the paper to the old man. who took it and locked at it. The li cense was read to him. "Mainly Jones:' he cried when the bride's name was pronounced. "Why. It ain't her it's Liza Allen, down by de crick." Here was a dilemma. "Well." said the white man. "there's only one thing to do. You must got another license. It is just J?.". thrown away." I'iicIo Joe took the paper, folded it and put it in liN pocket. "I'll done ak Mainly to have me." he said, "fob 1 don't think dar's .?.'! dif ference 'tween dein ladies." Philadel phia Publre Ledger. Art a nd the Yellow I'erll. When William M. chase, according to a current anecdote, had his summer j school at Sliiniiecoek. N. Y., he used to hold semipublic sessions in the main j studio building, when 'he sketches made by students during the week were exhibited and criticised. On one ' of these occasions, during a summer . when the Chinese question was occu pying public attention, one landscape ! showed a broad stretch of lawn painted in brilliant splotches of lemon color. 1 Mr. Chase examined It gravely. "It seems to me." he observed. Indi cating the lemon colored grass on the canvas, "that politics and not art Is the proper Held for an agitation of the yellow peril question." Harper'.1 Weekly. Hail I'erformeil III J'.nrt. Sir William Kussell. who 4:1s a Prlt Ish war correspondent In this country at tlie time of tlie America 11 civil war. ce I... met n northern volunteer about i:.,' from the Held while but tl,. L II ....... . ........ was still going on, but the man was going away from tlie light, and ho stopped to ask what news there was. . Hnssell asked. "Whv are vou not un at r f the front?" The man answered have fired away seventy-two rounds of Z I ball ammunition, and if my general blt l t,lr"I"i example of the Intlu cannot win the battle on that I am not n? on tm's of strong and constant L'fiinir to stay till he can." winds. Tho trees are in general bent " A Cutting Him O'.r. .... . t t f You?" snorted Miss Sharpe. "Marrv you? Why. you're only iiu apology for a man. "HiiL" protested Mr. Small, "you will not" "No; I will not accept the apology." Philadelphia Lodger. One of tlie many things children can not understand is why grown people that have no pictures in thein.-Atchi- rm Olobe WEDDINGS IN WALES. ftnnint CtJMtoiiiH Tlml Still Kxlnt Anions the 1'ennniitrj-. Some quaint customs still survive among the peasantry of south Wales nt least in the remote villages. One of the oddest Is the "bidding." When a young man and woman are engaged fi el rcu lar Is nrinted. known as a "bid-1 ding letter," and distribured at market and outside the chapels on Sunday so j that all may know of the event. The form is always the same and runs as follows: As we Intend to enter the matrimonial state we are encouraged by our friends to make a bidding' on the occasion at the voting man's father's hous6 (here follow the address and date of the entertain ment), when and where the favor of your gen id and agreeable company is most hum bly solicited, and whatever donation you may be pleased to bestow on us will be thankfully received, warmly acknowledg ed and cheerfully repaid whenever called for on a similar occasion by your obedient servants. JOIIX EVANS. JANE DAVIS. All being ready on the day, a party goes to fetch the bride to the bidding. She hides and has to he sought for in all directions, hut being at last found is escorted in triumph. Her procession Is met by that of the bridegroom, and they all repair to the church, where the wedding ceremony takes place, after which ail return to the groom's V 1. ........ -t . x . house to make merry and to count the gifts. These are generally In money and vary from a shilling up to half a sovereign. Each item Is carefully entered In a 000k by the "bidding clerk." together I With the donor's name an tlmt If . .... 1 ue repaid wnen he or she marries. As all the money will probably not be Called hi for tnaitv vn-irc enmn nrvf- .if j ,f tho pIveK sInglethe ! J"' wiple receive a tolerable start hi hie. Oddly enough, the bridegroom i is oxpocte.I to provide the kitchen clock f 1 1 . ding, the crockery ware, the parlor table and a chest of drawers. Things are done methodically in that part of the world.-London Tit-Pdts. LIVING SILVER. ' The l'rneeufi by Which Mercury Kitrncted I'rom Cliinnlmr. The chief scourco of mercury is its native sulphide, cinnabar. The mosl important mines of this mineral in Eu rope are those of Almaden. in Spain. I and Idria. In Illyria; in America, those j of New Almaden. in California. 'I ho silvery metal is obtained hj ; roasting the ores in specially construct ed open furnaces, where, by the ac j Hon of atmospheric air alone, the sul 1 phur is converted into sulphurous acid and passes on with the volatilized mercury into condensers. These are : usually masonry chambers, with wa ter cooled pipes, from which the fumes pa ms oa through earthenware pipe. ! and finally through others of wood I and g!a..s. Most of the yield is liquid mercurv. combined w ith soot, which is removed by agitating the mixture in rwentaclw ,.f t.,.rf..r.ftJ.I ir,n, n-lw.n tl... nw.rmirr " " 'uiv.a a till. it t, . l J 1 t'A', tliroiifl. 'Ph.. ml..l.-cilv..r l Html. - - p J 1I4. itl't I L i ft 7 !y puritiiil by straining through dense linen and is then sent out into cm merce in lea. her bags or wrought Iron bottles tit ted with screw tlu's. each holding about seventy-live pounds avoirdupois, THE KITCHEN DRESSER. It Wii.h Originally 11 flench on "Which .'.lent VVim Uri'xauil. Or. Johnson tells us that the kitchen j dresser was a bench in the kitchen on ! which meat was dressed, or prepared j for table and gi res the following lines in support of his view: 'Tis burnt. anl so Is all the mcnt. ! Whiit itojj.s ;;re the? Where Is the rasca' I How tlurst you. villains, bring It from tht Iri'sser. Ar.il servt thu to me that love It not? Shakespeare. A mril .Jresser In hor hall she had. On vvhieh full many a slender meal sh made. Dryden. Wright, in Ids "Domestic Manners of the Middle Ages." says: "One of the gr.at objects of ostentation in a rich man's house was Ids plate, which at dinner time he brought forth and spread on the table in sight of his guests. Afterward, to exhibit the plate to more advantage, the table was made with shelves or steps, on which the dif ferent articles could be arranged in rows, one above another. It was called in French, or Anglo-Norman, a tl res sol r. because on it the different articles were drosses, or arranged." It is this to which the modern poet refers: The powtor nlntos on the drestwr Caught und r-.-iIected .the Hume, aa shield) of armir.s the sunshine. Malice umi Superstition. Ill the s :ddl. j'"es malice and suner- 1 - , stitlon ton;..: expression in the forma tion of wax images of hated persons jiiiw in- iiiuirs 111 h UHil long ill', . ere l,it.. I I! t , t stuck. It was cotilidontlv IicUi-vimI th -t 1 in that way deadly Injury would be done to the person represented. This j belief and practice continued down to ' tne seventeenth century. The super- l stillon indeed still holds Its place In ! the highlands of Scotland, "where." says u well informed writer, "within tne last few years a clav model of nn I iktliittti- -.... 4 if ... .oii.m m a Stream, liav nir 1 Phieetl there lii the belief that :.s the clay washed - - -' away so would the 1 1.1...,., . . ""' me union one decline tree?, nml A Inil When one travels through the parts ' of Pelgium borderimr on tho 1... ( v. 4 low aru tne interior of the country. It : was proved some time ago that the ' 11 ... truiiKs or trees hurled In the neat uos of Holland all He in a southwest to northeast direction. HU Plunetn. 1 A vouinr centleiiein te.,a t Lu "l ' :,., UaI,ass!"K examination in physics. uillllil null III IIIIVMCS. He U-l nol- .,., . , , - n' JNhat Planets were known to the ed. ancient "Well, sir," he responded 'there Pause - "! think the earth, but I an Dot ouite eorhiln T on.lnn rru..T , - .i.-i.iia. CHOICE MISCELLANY A New ProfcMMioii. A new profession has been made necessary by the changed conditions of modern Industry. The social secretary serves as a point of contact between master and men. It is his (or her business to know the employees per soually as their employer cannot know them, to know whether the conditions under which they work are wholesome physically, mentally and morally, and to know how to Improve them if they are not what they ought to be. The head of a department store which employs 500 girls says that his social secretary has been worth to him in cash three times as much as his service has cost him. She has given the girls talks on hv-giene, thus Improving their health and their physi cal olfectiveness. She has organized literary clubs among them, thus stimu lating them mentally and improving the social atmosphere of the store. She has mothered the girls, many of whom are daughters of Immigrants , and who in our public schools have en joyed opportunities which their moth ers never had. These girls according ly, at the most critical age. make the perilous discovery that they know more than their mothers do. The so- cial secretary Is one whose knowledge I . -a . and position they respect and one to whom they can go as a friend. And if she is what she ought to he she ac quires an inllueuce over them which Is as valuable to the girls as It Is to their employer. Josiah Strong in So cial Service. Titled Xen-spnjier I'roprletiir. I must take this opportunity to con gratulate Mr. Walter of the Times. Ho lias constantly supported the govern ment. It has been right, uo matter what it may have done, and those who have opposed It have been dcn-Jtinced ' as pmiidous idio; ms PPr. hviot: a title for the preferred to rema idiots in the columns of Obviously lie might have asking, but he has ain Mr. Walter, al though other press proprietors have blossomed Into peers, baronets or knights. In this he has earned .the ro stioet of all iournalists. When newspa per proprietors are rewarded with ti tles for having instructed their writers to support a party, the obvious sugges tion is that they have been paid not only for past services, but for ftituru ones, for a dog who bites the hand of the man who feeds him Is not In good odor with his brother dogs, and thfl titled newspaper proprietor is bound in common decency to profess approval of all done by his benefactor. La b..ui hero in Loudon Truth. Knst I nil In. it Athlete. As is only to be expected, consider ing their national diet-curri-bhat the physique of the natives of India will not compare with an Englishman's, though they possess a litheness of form md quickness of eye that we lack and thr't make them among the linest gymnasts and jugglers In the world. Such perfect balancing powers have they that, even supposing them bereft ,,f Ul1' tt,,1:u'ioUi; r:lsP of fo possessed" M' - v :lU hareftiotetl races, there would W Still IOII IllUCll lO aUlllire 111 IllCir SK1I1. -SO Contortion SCOHlS tOO (ttlllCUlt f,,r ,h,'IM- " l,:,r tno sli-", r smooth nti:itwl; " licifrlit w try tju-lr -'-.-. .mw u """; ujuiv.ii lo lim:u!- Even a slip is of little Con- sequence to such clever tumblers. They seem to have all the climbing powers of a cat. As runners their staying pow er is most remarkable. A dak-walltth deems the task of running twenty miles a mere trilie. Fry's Magazine. Frnnee'd Frontier Fort. Not less than ninety-three fortilied places of modern type, some of them bcin-r iio.iiiy impregnable, guard at present the French frontier from Dun kirk to Nice. Most of them have been built since the Franco-Prussian war, at a cost of $ho.(H 10.000. France has to appropriate annually about $1,000. (hki for the maintenance of these for tresses. Kotently not a few military men. among them General Pierron. the former commander of the Fifth army corps, have expressed grave doubts as to the value of this chain of fortilica tions in time of war. They point to the fact that it would take about dvH).0KI men to garrison all the fortresses, in eluding Paris and Lyons, an army which would undoubtedly be of more value in the Held. General Pierreit predicts a "total collapse" in case of a new war with Germany if the numer ous fortifications are to be retained. A Curlou-i I'nrl.ilnn. A curious character came up recent ly for trial in Paris In tho person f Auguste Kallmann, charged with thi' attempted murder of Abbe IttW lo November last. Itnum.i un's mvn de scription of himself Is as follows: I am not an anarchist. I am a 'revolt.' an independent; I support no particu lar theory. I have no grudge a gains! Abbe Lebel. but I am opp'-cd wt prin ciple to all priests, soldiers, magis trates and professors. Desirous of e;tiV lug my life. I have given mysplf tip as a prisoner and deimiinl to In sttt to the guillotine." The court could not unite see its way to grant this requ-sit. l"t awarded the prisoner tifteen year.' penal servitude, with ton vears exile to follow. The Filipino "VYnter Pull. A traveler In the Philippines writes- rll CiC flint rvt1 OAtntii.f tht tl the vv "" l"""" - currying a long bamboo oytmtler upon her shoulder? She Is rettirniiK I from tlie waterworks and is carryufc. i home a good supply of clean ilriitkhrc ; water. Yes. It Is a big bamboo m- s"ro,J" vlht feet long and twenty-two im:hes at least In circumference. The inside divisions have been forced out by means of a stick and the Interna? compartments all combined into tw. Tl. 1 t1 .. "oius a 101 or liquid. ! '"IBn" "tune. uuw ueeu loiu. remarket! tlie vtc- nor in Salt Lake City, "that your lake Is drying up. What seems to be ttm I A . . ... cause?" 1 ' T mmcc litna. M r 1 a I . t .. tam uie native, "ii you had as much salt In vou s tir i. t t . . there lake s got you d be gittln mirtv dry too ."-Chicago Tribune. Tho T one withon t i 7 ? l0VC ?. W lthUt The HelrCSS-But it jsn - t B0 easy t0 get hcr