BAN DON HKCOKDER. A COSTLY BREAKFAST. When ISn" Mi'"- Worth Their AWIkIiI In tlold In Sim l"rniicl?co. Hens' eggs were worth their weight Jn gold, writes Thomas li. Parish in one or his stories of the very early days hi San Francisco. A couple of young men who had recently landed from Tennessee dropped into A Id rich's for breakfast one morning. Not being aware of the rarity ami consequent priees of i-ggs in California ami haxiug live dollars still left with which to pay for brc.;..fast for two. they calmly or dered their usual breakfast of ego and toast. When the bill was presented the young gentlemen saw. to their con sterna I km. Hut the amount wa- U. They had idy What vas to In; done: After n consultation tostMher it was decided that one of litem should remain while :1m- other wetit out to look for C-douci ?ift. au oki time friend whom they kvw t. l in the eity. The colo nel was sni f hiihI. who. after hearing the .story of hu oung frieml ami ask lug who was ith him. inquired what they had had for breakfast, "liggs.'' was the reply. "ISgg-: liggs;" CM-laimed the olo uel. "lkl you uot know, you blaukety blNtik fool, thai hu lay gold in California:-" "1 did not. hot 1 do." saul our yniiMS friewd. V1L" continued the eokn I kindly, handing over a fifty dollar soM slug, "take this am! remem ber after this that you are nt in Ten nessee, where g.rs ar given awa." . THE GAME OF GOLF. A I'llol inif of Kioi;-.. With h lt-rord of Over I'mir 1 1 II ml Tfll A game witli a hi-t ry of m iv than 4 years must tcessaril have some interesting records. I'olf li:ts been greatly liked by kings, hi (tie time of .lames 1. it was generally practit-ed by nil classes. The unfortunate Chanes 1. wa devoted to golf. Wluic n a visit In S.-otbtud in n41. as It- was deeply engage! in a game uews v as brought him of the breaking ut oi a rein-Lion in Ireland, ami the royal iotfer threw down his eih and retinal in great agi tnikut to Hoiyrood Hon. Wlu-n he was imprisoned at NVweasile hi keeHr kindly rmitn-,l him to take re-reatioit oil the golthtg iiuks with his train. It is said tli.it Mary, queen of Scots, was mvu playmg gif in the tiekl beside Seat on a lev da - after the murder of lier husband. In W.7 a ina3JiJketti g.W medal was jreeut ed u St. Andrew's by William IV.. to be played ftr annually, cue -f the earlier kimrs forbade the importation of tsull" lalls from Holland Ihi-jiim it khiIv xnray na small quan title of gold and silver out ttf" tin kiugdonte of Scotkunl." and at tie time "g.ife and futeiMil ud other unprofitable gaii-.es" w.re ftr'Hdden in Knglaud Imi-.W' mvhry. s u---sjiry iu tin def-'n-e of Ae natkn. was lemg gletti! in tik4r furor. learifs Wi-kly. COWARD AD AW. The rrt'tti".- of Mini t I.:iy the Itl:i! I in A'oiumn. Vr ki-s and U'H" is. I lieliew-. nu "unwritten law of .li.-. .i!r.. ." T'i -law. s I uuderstaiwl. 4'.::d Adatu hn's soiuethjies uuiuage to U'y. uHh-U rehictautly. lUvaux be would like t teM -he -takl very mr.elj like tell If - - If tin st.try f the k!s did mt iu--olve liluisidf in the leiiiii: Ur.t at this; jn:Httuv "the unwriton liw- .f ehivalrj " sti in. and he is -..vii. And chivalry is the tr- up wliieii h- i-limlw. chatierinz to hin:sdf tltv tt"i d f rmu ta. "Tin woman wImim thn - :ves :. le with mm." et Alas. p.r woman! She hap iHard h!m ;."i g thi ever tii:i s!: in au mis-liiii .'e-ire 1 1 .hare her f3 with him ga leni tlw f r bldleu ale. Xo do!i'i b .fTere-,I him its rskst aul rie-t ";.!: She al ways does- at lirst. Not afterward! A m as he turns trs:lt r ami runs up a ire- Im taks l Miting him. niHaili-rkally sfHtikiug. with -im-nuts. Tliis is quite natural on her part. Slie had thousbt him a man and when l tKklnly eliamres inti a uiotikey slie tlesn umierstaiul it. Ta this eause may 4.tdy Ih attrihnb! stu f Hm ruKhMts whk'h eeaioiially jar the ftaruwnktus estate of matrimony.--b'ron Mark c.mlirs "lne Opiuious.' Tin- lti::l- of u V.'-el;. TIm- battk of -. vc'k tlM- sreai eoufllct at Tnrs. iu whk'h li:rh-s .Mar lei overthrew the anui'ti", A. 1 . T.-". "Hie m.mlM'rs of tin SaraiiMi riy are variously estimat-! at from to 7n"Mo. and the monkish historians s.-y that ::7T..tt!i were ki!ld on Um- tiekl. it is susiied that these llgurifls an a tiros exaggeration, but it is eenato that few baitks of history hltve heeii eiUwr si bkxuly so de Clalve. Voi'iie :i n I 1 l;i n . Curiosity had kI tlw little girl to forswke the nursery, where the other cltiklr n were idayiur. and to iro to take a p, at tlw gn-at parlors wh--re tlie ' e4MUMiiy had assembled, but she pru lnwi!y remained vneijikl among lie Iahus. . One of tin -i!sis spied hr thre. "Hello. Htik girl!" he sakl. "Are you itttvhig a gool time;" "M-hni! Say. kv yu iee tlutl lady over there under tlw ehawde!Sir? Tlial's my mauima. Isn't she niee'r" "IndetKl slw Is. '"an't you intrmltiee jneV "CoOdneSS. IK)'." die eehtitnel. "I :ouldn't do that. I haven't Ihhh intro duced to lwr myself yet." thkago Tribune. Ilcmil iiimI (In- llfKHf. "How d you do. .iiv. Vemisy e. elaiiite-l a gentleman of that lad.v'.s ae qiiHhuaiiee. "I'ray, what brings you out .so early in ihe day:" "Oh, I've juvj Uhh lo tlw phoiogra jiher vrith my M-t pug Tongo" iwiiieh she earried in her armsi, "ami we have had our ptrtraits taken together, haven't we. I'ougo'r I'.i-amy ainl the beast, you know, .Mr. .brfitison." with a saucy little laugh. "Ami what a little Iwauty he is. to be sure," repiieil .Johnson inadvertently as he tenderly stroked poor Pougo's cranium. And then he suddenly remetulwretl and became hot and eohl in turn, and they parted stninsors forevormnn; ipiTuiiil "Wltat :t muddle we have bieii iu for the past two months, I'olly," said a fond mother the other day, as she turned from the machine that had been making a record for itself, in turning out dainty lawn and gingham dresses for the little folks; enough to last them through the summer vacation and so save care and worry for the mother. "We forgot everything else in solving the problem of where we should go for thestimmet vacation," she continued. "The outcome of the Jlussian and Jap anese war didn't interest us half as much, and the appalling accidents by laud and sea, the terrible crimes that have startled the nation, the Presi dent"., bear hunts, the Portland I 'air, all were of secondary consideration until that dear little red book Vaca tion lia"), published by the California Northwestern Wailway the Pictur esque route of California made its aj pcarance and hcl'trd us to solve the vexed question of where we should go for the summer and. find rest anil pleas ure combined. The booklet itself is a little gem, for it is beautifully gotten up with many line illustrations of the dif ferent sections through which this favored road passe:, and which prove very enticing to everyone who scans the content.-, and makts them only the more eager to start for the country im mediately. " T-liesim shining through a fog over the golden gate," taken from their ferry boat, theTiburon, is a leautiful and very ellective picture, in fact one of the prettiest little scenes of the bay I have ever seen. Look at that dainty little picture the 'Horse shoe Mend." Does-'! that make you waul to get right on t on one of those lint cars, and go -pinning around the curve? The very thought is exhiliar atzng. When once we had made up our minds w here to go, I felt that I had dropped a load otl'my shoulders. We have leeu living a new life in that lit tle book. 'Vacation it " ever since we received it, for some member of the family i?-con.-lant iy studying it in their leisure moments. We are not going to remain in one place during the entire vacation. We go to Willits first ami the grandeur of the scenery along the road can not be surpas.-ed. Then we are going to visit some of the famous mineral spring- at the ditlerent sum mer resorts, and we are not going to forget to spend a few days at Camp Vacation, on the ( lueriieville branch of the road. Kvery place you can go has something to oiler a little dillereiit iu the way of interest and scenery. My husimiid is dreaming of some babbling brook teeming w ith trout and he get. his gun out every few days and looks it over, for he claim.- that this section is a per feet paradise for hunters. The hunting paraphernalia he h:is already purchased to take along looks as if he was going for a year instead of two short months. .My daughter isa water color artist and my oldest .-on a camera liend, and they are living in great ex pectations of the harvest of beautiful picture- they expect to bring home. It i- well worth toiling the balance of the year to be able to enjoy the two mouth.-' vacatian iu the heart of the mountains or in the fertile valleys, in the country homes or in the pretty towns and resorts. There i.- no reason why everybody should not enjoy a va cation every summer, for by a purusal of 'Vacation, li'Oo," you will tind that you can live just as cheaply as you can at home, and yet have a decided change." What shall the summer girl prepare in the way of a pretty and yet inex jKMisive outlit for her vacation'.' That question ha- been asked several times lately and I have delayed answering it for several reasons. It is getting too near the mid-summer holidays, how ever, and so I have U-en looking into the matter for several days, and have concluded to ive you the result of a talk with one of the mo-t attractive gir'- who will grace the ditlerent sum mer re-tut.-. She has no money to spend foolishly, and so she makes every dollar count. I would be willing to wager that there will be girls who spend a vast thai more money who will not kwik half a.- attractive. Sne Im- one thing in her favor, however, that probably thej do not pos-ess she knows how to wear her clothes and get the best cllect. She would ap Mnr ilre ed in a dainty and inexpen sive lawn, while; they would look dowdy or ovei'dreC-sed in their silks and satins. It is a gift to know how to wear your clothes -and !mIc like you had ju-t stepped out of a fashion plate, and she has been wonderfully blessed in that respect. Slie has three shirt waist suit-of white corded pique, and with these she nlm;.t invaribly wears a blue crepe tie or I'ibbous of the same hue, ami either a belt of the same or of white or black leather. She looks as trim a- a bird wheu she dons this at tire, and, to use : woman's phrase, "like she had jus stepped out of a bandliox." She has au advantage over other clever girls, and is her own mil liner. With the white pique stubs .she u.-ually wears a w hile hat trimmed in black velvet and forget-me-nots. She h is a dainty white organdie with a single big pink ro-e thrown down upon it here and there,-ami when slie gets ready to wear "u, if she needs a hat, oil' come the forget-me-nots from the dainty white chip and she pins on a cluster of pale pink crush roses. She has the name o'f having a hat for every costume, when the same hat, with what she terms one of her sleight-of-haml performance's in changing the trimming, must answer for the various costumes. A dainty sheer white or gandie, made up with lace and inser tion, is the most eluborate costume she has This seres for the little parties and informal hops that are given by the young people. She has a dainty white lace hat that sli" dons with this costume. A little tatr outing suit with gloves, shoes and hat harmoni.ing in color. A changeable red and blue summer silk, made v5:h pipings of plain red silk and si red straw hat, one of the turban ellects, with a cluster of red cherries, gives the finishing touch to the jaunty little costume. This, with a well-fitting tan covert jacket, made up her summer outlit, and it was inexpensive and all one could desire. Xo one can ever succeed who goes alKut their work in a half-hearted way. If you are listless and alsent-minded, or worse still, brooding over your un happy fate that compels you to work for the money to sustain you, then it would be better for you to get out of the slough of despondency, go home and sleep it oil". Such a person is a hinderauce instead of a help. Do the best you can and put your best efforts into your work, think of something cheerful every moment your mind is not devoted to your task, go over mis takes with a determination to sift your work until you find out where the mis take lies, and correct your blunder, which is not likely to occur again if you adopt this method. Keep a song thrilling awav in your heart. Kven if it never escapes your lips, it makes life worth the living and clears the atmos phere around you, and makes others cheerful as well. Take an active inter e-t and the task- will lose its unattrac tive side and the work will be aceom plished and iu half the time. There is a little woman who is one o the toilers in this land of plenty, and she says whenever she is tempted to complain she remembers a little fern that pushed its wav out oi a crevice in the rockv hilside of her old home, and with seemingly nothing to sustain the roots it kept throwing out new fronds until its beautiful, graceful leaves made the one fair spot in the vicinity. It was one of the coarse varieties, almost on the brake order, and every day they expected it to fall from its own weight, but it idling tenaciously io the rocks, teaching its own little les.-on of a de termination to win in spite of all dif ficulties. "I have gone back to my task more contented with my lot and determined to do the best I could nianv times after looking at my fern,' .-he said. Nature can often preach us au o'er true sermon if we will only heed it. BRIEF REVIEW. The Cheerlul Man. "Tale Itself has to concede a great many thinus to the cheerful man. The man who persistently faces the sun o that all shadows fall behind him. the man who keeps his machinery well lubricated with love and good cheer, can with-tand the hard jolts and disappointments of life infinitely better than ihe man who always looks at the dark side. The man who loves j-hadow. who dwells forever in the gloom a pessimistic man has ve-y lit tle power iu the world as compared uiih a bright, sunny soul. The world makes way for the cheer ful man; all doors ily open to him who radiate- sunshine. He does not need an intro luetioii: like the sunlight, he Is welcome everywhere. A cheerful disposition is not only a power -it is also a great health tonic. A depressed mind makes the system more -useeptiblc to disease; encourages its development because It kills tin power of resistance. A cheerful soul can resist disease, and It is well known among physicians that there is a great er chance of recovery from exhaustive diseases of a bright, sunny soul than of a gloomy, despondent one. "Cheer fulness js health: melancholy, disca-e." Cloom and depression feed disease and hasten its development. S''vss. John Paul Jones. .I hn Paul, the Kirkcudbright market gardener's son. who elected to be fa mous as Paul Jones, has long ceased to be the interesting personage he was in the eyes of the naval authorities of this e Mint tv when, in command of a rotten e Mast Indlaman known as the I nu de I iiiras and rechristened the P.on- li Miime liichard. he was a holy terror In the tlrth of Forth and when he had engaged and captured a P.ritish frigate iu P.ritish waters after one of the most singular sea combats on record. The some time "blaekbirder" and '.'. ggief w hom the Russian Catherine decorated and advanced somewhat per saltum to the grade of admiral was a traitor, of cnnr.se. In the view of the P.ritish government, but none the less a thorough seaman of quite unusual talent and originality, with a bulldog courage and tenacity to match. The Captain Jones, too. who sent Lady Sel kirk back her plate, with his compll uients. had the instincts of a gentle man. M ire than llio other countries he served. America has recognized his merits. Pall Mall Cazette. Nearlv all small birds make their long Ilights by night, spending the day time quietly feeding and resting, so that if on any day in May the treetops are full of Hitting little warblers it is no sign that the following day will find them still there. Some kinds, llko phoe bes, song si (arrows, meadow larks and bluebirds, come very early as soon as the snow la all gone and the south slop ing hillsIdcH begin to feel warm aud "smell of bprlng." St. Nicholas. Tourist fin retired vibagei So that the oltiest Inhabitant V One hundred aud four vears old? No wonder you re to. .ml of lii'M V-itivo 1 iliiiiiio He ain't done nothin' in this yer place "ce pt grow old, and it's took him a sight time to do thai. We live longer than our forefathers, hut we suffer more from a thousand artificial anxieties and cares. Bulwer. Distinction is the consequence, never the object, of is great mind. Allston. LOVE OF NATURE. The More Man bones Out of Door X.lfe the Mure He ArimircH It. The more mar. has become engaged in the eontlicts of civilization, In intel lectual disappointment, the more he has felt the uselessness of knowledge, the more he has turned to certain ex pressions of art as au escape. He has addressed poems to nature, has paint ed landscape more and more, has shown iu every way that such an es cape was a dream. Art has existed from the very beginning, even before the Urst man stuttered out his nam ing of the animals and expressed their character by the sound of their name. The dances of savages, as we call them-- that is to say, of people of earli er forms of civilisation invented be fore the arts of design, record iu a po etic way what they do and the sea sons of such doing aud even the ap pearance of nature -the storm, the rajn. the clouds blowing across the sky. the lashing of the sea against the shore. In Fiji they have a dance where the women spread out their arms like the wave linos of the surf, aud the children, springing up behind lliein. represent the foam of the wave crests. From these beginnings we know that tragedy and comedy, as we call them, have grown. Then, as all these disappear in fact, they are re corded in the art of painting. And as man more and more leaves behind him a life of out of doors in so much does he desire to admire it.- McCiure's Mag azine. THE BUDDHIST HADES. Klyrht Kiimj- Slim en" of the .Most Aw ful Kinils of Torture. The place of torment to which ail wicked P.uddhists are to be assigned on the day of linal reckoning is a ter rible place of punishment. This llllddhistic hell is divided into eight "easy stages." In the first the po.r victim is comi oiled to walk for un told ages in li s bare feet over hills thickly set with rcdhot needles, poii-. upward. In Ihe second sta.:e the sk.n is all carefiill tiled or rasped from the body ami irritating mixtures ap plied. In the third stage the uniK hair and eyes are plucked out and the denuded body -awed and planed in; i all sorts of fantastic shape-, 'ill-' fourth stage is thai of "sorrow ful t iin filiations." In the fifth ihe lefl -ie of the body and the denuded he.i 1 ,re carefully roasted. Vema. the P.:;. Idio tic Satan, superintending the work In tin sixth stage the arms are torn frm the body and thrown into an immen-e vat among the eyes, nails ; ur pre viously removed. Then in plain hear ing of the sore footed, blind, maimed, roa-ied and bleeding victim Ihe whole horrid mass is p .uudeil iil a j -dy. In the seventh stage the other side of the victim and his feet are roasted brown, and then comes the eighth and last stage, in which the c-.-.ia'.i !:ite is thrown into the bottomless p'M of per dition. WOMEN WRITERS. None Amuiiur Them llns Kver Attnlu ! Heat UreiituehH In I'm-H. Though the quality and range of her genius were deep, generous and wide. Klizabeth Harrett P.rowning cannot be described, if language is to be used ac curately, as occupying a place among the p.(ets justly designated great. In no tongue hitherto has any female writer attained to that supreme posi tion, and were this the appropriate mo ment, which it is not. it would perhaps be possible to explain why n woman is likely ever to do so. Not a few fe male writers are in effect in the front rank of novelists. P.ut prose-romance is one thing and poetry quite another, aud there is a chasm between them; nor does the circumstance of novels be ing in this age more popular than po etry a fleet in any degree the inherent and immutable difference. Klizabeth Barrett P.rowning was. "Aurora Leigh" notwithstanding, essentially and al most exclusively a lyrical poet. It would be easy to add almost indefinite ly to illustrations of her being one of those who "learn In suffering what they teach in song." not one of the greater poets who pass through that experience but end by getting beyond It. Alfred Austin at Unveiling of a P.tist of Mrs. Prowniiig. Iluhliifcteln's Charity. I'ubinstein probably traveled more than any other virtuoso. In his time he made many fortunes and gave them away to the poor in Russia. During a famine which raged among the Rus sian peasants he journeyed to Vienna. Moscow and St. Petersburg to play for harity. The price of seats rose to un heard of figures, but every penny of the money went to the starving farm ers. It is said that in the course of twenty-eight years the sum which he thus disposed of amounted to i?i"0,0O0. Types of )!! World Ilenuty. It is said that when artists are seek ing fir models the palm for beauty and symmetry of figure is given to the girls of Spain, while the daughters of rural Ireland are a good second. The pretty faces and graceful throats are found among I'uglish maidens. A model for a perfect arm would be sought for among Crecian ladles, while a lady of the Turkish harem would be regarded as the possessor of a daintily com mendable hand. Italians are usually good in figure and some of the most beautiful models, perfectly proportion ed, are derived from the woui.mi of sunny Italy. Frenchwomen, as a rule, are not in request, being too thin and vivacious for the purpose, while the face and limbs of a Cernian frau are too commonplace for artistic work. London Standard. To H.-.i.-e v:sy Cnnvs. 1 can give a sure preventive against orn ptiiling by the black rogues. I h id tried all sorts of devices and was rigging a scarecrow, when a gawky came along and said. "Tie cars of corn to the t ps of poles around yonr Held, and the crows won't stay nigh it." 1 said. "They will cat the corn, and you aud tiny will both laugh at me." I tried the plan, however, and sure . noiigh ihey looked at those poles and wenl a. -ay and stayed away. I suii p i e it was on Ihe same principle as that of the Trojan warrior who said. "I most fear the li reeks when offering gifts." K. P. Powell In Suburban Life. POETS AND THUNDER- A l)eiei-ltt Ion hy Hyron iiuil n Coin i.icnt on It ly Scott. P.yron in the third canto of "Chllde Harold" describes a thunderstorm in Switzerland which occurred at ruid nighl on June 1",, 1SH5. He notices the awful stillness which precedes it: All he.iv. n and earth are still, though not ill s!ej.). I hit breathless, until From ivuk to p(ak. the rattllnp crags anion?. Leaps the live thnnilor! Not from ono lone cloud. Hut every mountain now hath found a tongue. And Jura answers, through her misty shroud, P.aek to the joyous Alps, who call to her aloud! The description is too long to quote, ami. i'.deed. too well known, but Sir Walter Sott's criticism on it may not be so well known. He says: "This is one of the most beautiful passages of the poem. The 'fierce and far delight' of a thunderstorm Is here described iu verse almost as vivid as its lightnings. The live thunder 'leap ing among the rattling crags,' the voice of mountains, as if shouting to each other, the plashing of the big rain, the gleaming of the wide lake, lighted like a phosphoric sea. present a picture of sublime terror, yet of enjoyment, often attempted, but never so well, certainly never better, brought out in poetry." Notes ami tjuerirs. A HOT CHALLENGE. Colonel I'rnnli Wolfortl mid HI First Kentucky Cavalry. In the essays by Kugene Newman on public men and events a good story is told of Frank Wolford. who command ed the First Kentucky cavalry of the Cnion army and who later was a rep resentative in congress from that state. It was said that the colonel of the First Kentucky had some novel com mands that he "lired" at the boys, such as "Huddle up. thaK" "Scatter out. thai-1" and "Form a line of fightl" It is related that when some 'st Point otlicers were sent out to investigate and report on the otrtcieney of certain volunteer regiments Wol ford's cavalry fell under their scrutiny, and they crit icized it very severely. Wolford heard them patiently and then said: "See them two rigiments over tharV One is a Michigander and the other an Older squad. You have just passed them as all right. Now. I know nothing ab Mit your drills, your evolutions and your maneuvers. My boys know Imw to ride, how to shoot, how to light and how to stand Sire, ami you take them two rigiments over thar I showed you. Station them whar you please oil any ground, in town or country.- iu field or in forest- ami I will lake my rigiment and what we don't kill or cripple of them me and my lmys will chase out ot the State of Tennessee before the sun Is in the heavens tomorrow morning.' THE DIFFICULT TASK. ( n:il.l:iir the Particular Mmi' Itntr llnther. the Unrher. "ho you know, one of the most ditli- ult things in this business." said ihe barb r as he ran the comb through the hai. brush, "is in the mailer of couibing a cust ij.er' hair"; is is a rather singu lar fad that o will tlnd few barbers who h:ive -lie ceiled in solving the problem of c inl ing a customer's hair ju-t as he wants it. no matter how long the m::;i may have been a patron of his chair. M" course there are a few e;eitIo'is to this ruie. There are a few men in ihe world who do not care wh iter lliel,- h.iir is combed at all Will tl:.- class of men of course ;t doc-n't i:.ak" much difference how the l.as-ler combs ihe hstfr. Hut at le.i-t n'neiy out of every hundred men who pai ionize barber shops arc very partic ular about t':e way you omb their hair mile s you have insolrel them w ill an exfaordinary co-iiKciiee. ln-Ie-. in fact. i:ev 'nave a belter opin ion of ihe barber's judgment than the Jiave of their own the barber will miss the mark when he comes to put the fm'shing touclv5 on the hair. The rea son for th's is not altogether a matter of vanity. There are a great many men whose ! ks are completely altered by n ching" In the way the hair is coin ed. Take the man. for in stance, wh i In the biblt of pa'ting hi- hair on the side, ami part It In the middle, or the man who is in the habit of combing his h:dr d -wn rnA parting it mi one si-'e hippos you roach or pcmp-idour Ibe h 'ir c-in yon not see what change would follow in the gen eral appearance of Pie man? This fa.-t has much b do with making the comb ing of a man's hair a ma ter of much d'SHciilly. and I do n ' ea'g rate when I av it is i ne of Hie larbe"s hardest (ask- " - N' w Orle ius Times-Pemoerat. THE EGG IN HISTORY. II ! Suri-oumlfil by .Many Ancient l.eyreml. mill llcllef... Like uiaiijt another term iu Chris tian nomenclature, the word "Faster" i- derived fr.mi pagan sources. The Sax on guides-, of light. Fstra. was 'loiiored with an annual festival at the vernal equinox. The Jewish Passover was also regulated by the March moon, mid the resurrection of Jesus occurred at this season. In later centuries the great Christian festival came to hear ihe pagan name Faster and to be cele brated at a time coincident with the Jewish feast. Siii'-e remotest limes the egg has s.m i i bo li zed re-creation. Persian tra li tion ha; It that the world was hatched from au egg at the season which cor responds to the vernal equinox, for which r'-ason eggs are still given for New Year's presents by the Persians. The druids said that the sun. a great egg. hatched from itself the earth and oiher planets. P.y the Chinese it is beliexed that the world was formed of two parts of a great egg. From the yolk man came forth. He then waved his hum!, and the upper half of Ihe shell went up ward ami became the concave heavens; the lower half reversed, making the convex earih. and the white albumen became Ihe seas. When Christianity took over various of the Saxon rites the Paschal eggs of the Jew; were vested with a new sig nilicaiico namely, the resurrection of Christ. They wen colored red in mem ory of the blood shed for man's re demption. Chicago News. A TALE OF TWO SCOUTS. .Narrow Keaiie From n Ituttler and n Ilmul of IndlmtH. In Cyrus Townsend Brady's "Indian Fights and Fighters" is a tale of two scouts, Trudeau and Stlllwell, who carried to General Carpenter through an Indian infested country the news that Major Forsyth was being besieged iu the sands of Heecher's Island by a t thousand warriors. Here Is one Inci dent of their journey: "During tin's day a large party of scouting Indians halted within 100 feet of Ihe wallow where the scouts were hiding. Simultaneously with their ar rival a wandering rattlesnake made Its appearance Iu front of the two scouts, who were hugging the earth and ex pecting every minute to be discovered. "In his way the rattlesnake was as deadly as the Indian. The scouts could have killed him easily had it not been for the proximity of the Cney ennes. To make the slightest move ment would call attention to their hid ing place. Indeed, the sinister rattle of the venomous snake before he struck would probably attract the notice of the alert Indians. Between the sav age reptile and the savage men the scouts were In a frightful predicament, which young Stillwell. a lad of amaz ing resources, instantly and effectually solved. "He was chewing tobacco at the time, and as the snake drew near him and made ready to strike Stlllwell completely routed him by spitting to bacco juice in his mouth and eyes and all over his head. The rattlesnake lied. He could not stand such a dose. The Italians presently moved on, having noticed nothing, and so ended perhaps the most terrible half hour the two men had ever experienced." HAVE READY CASH. It In the t:rutwt Moving Force In the nunlne.HM World. One of the greatest millionaires of (Mir country lived before he made his millions on a week and at a time when his income was $10,000 a year. He saved all the rest of his salary for judicious investments. He had been a poor boy. accustomed to a frugul mode of life. He began his career in the city sweeping out a store for $:5.."0 a week. Later he was advanced to $7.f0. The mode of living which he was obliged to adopt as a boy he considered quite gooil enough for later years, especially when he saw that by denying himself for awhile longer he might make the experiences and hard knocks he had gained count for more than a mere liv ing. He might have argued that he was doing pretty well to earn $10,000 a year and that he deserved to enjoy it. P.ut he preferred to use his earnings to make more money that some day he might be able to dispense with a sala ried position altogether. And this man had a wife. too. who was farsighted enough to be willing to live on a small sum when it meant an easier road for both by and by. Peady cash Is the greatest moving force in the business' world. It speaks with the loudest voice, aud its posses sion represents business acumen. Of course there are exceptions in cases of inheritance, etc.. but the exception on ly proves the rule. Cornelius Vanderbilt worked day and night, saving every penny, until he had $;'..iio. the nest egg about which gath ered one of the largest fortunes ever amassed in America. The principle of thrift inculcated by those hard, self de nying years made hhu a great financier.-New York Commercial. GULLIBILITY OF SHEEP. A Co in ion I Study of the Ixtrtiut ol Aniuuil Stnpldlty. The utter stupidity of sheep is per haps nowhere more strongly evidenced than in the perfect satisfaction with which a ewe that has lost her lamb will take to a strange lamb around which has been fastened the skin of her dead offspring. Considering that the skin of the dead Iamb is often merely thrown loosel over the back of the living lamb, some times hanging almost to the ground on one side or the other and making the lamb appear the quaintest kind of ani mal imaginable, the ewe's gullibility In this respect is remarkable. There can be no other explanation of her satisfac tion than that she really thinks the inutlled little stranger is her own prog eny; otherwise she would give It no at tention whatever. Its appearance does not seem to count, nor even its voice. Its smell is every thing, which may be seen in any Hock of ewes and lambs, for while the moth ers certainly appear to know the bleat ing of their own children, the identifica tion is always completed by the ewe smiling the mat of her lamb. I have been looking at two such quaint families iu the lambing pens re cently, and the picture of a sedate ewe placidly attending to two weird little creatures which look as If they have been half Hayed tone of them was ac tually dragging its second skin in the straw) was the most comical study of animal stupidity which could be imag ined. London Express. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. An old man doesn't care much for jokes. What's the use of People won't take It. giving advice? Not many men know if the advice their wives give is good or bad. as they seldom act upon it. To every man: Know what puts th.it sad look on your w ife's face"; livery one susj eets that it is you. livery man who is Hearing the end of his das must regret the worry he has given to false alarms all through life. Do not go too much Into details hi your conve sat o l. If you touch only Ihe 1: gh places jou can get over more ground. When you inquire of a man. "How are you';" he will reply, "Oh" (with u long pause on the "oh"), "pretty well." indicating that he could be u whole lot better. Atchison Globe. Identifying the SpenkiTM. "The lady in the purple waist Is out of order," announced the presiding of ficer at a recent woman's convention. "The lady In the gray foulard has the Hoor." Who s.iys women are not parliamentarians?- Pittsburg Post. ENGLISH SERVANTS. They Don't Want Ke.ipect. tint Insist I iion Their "Ritrht." To the American settling in London nothing is more confusing than the at titude of English servants, their con tempt for the slightest consideration of their feelings and their fury at the least infringement of their rights. At fust sight It seems that in spite of their dignity they accept extraordinari ly small wages, but the American finds housekeeping in London quite expen sive, for not only is the work so spe ciali.ed that an immense number of servants is required to do it, but they consume a great deal of tune and food in live meals a day, which is consider ed their right. Class distinctions below stairs are regarded much more scrupulously than above, and the unfortunate mistress of a house has to understand the gratle of every one she employs, from the house keeper to the scullery maid. Woe be tide her if she confuses an upper and ji lower servant or gives au order to the wrong one. Au American woman married to nn Kiiglishman and settled in London told me that she installed a dumbwaiter in the hope of saving trouble to both her cook and her butler. At the end of a month she found it unused and on in quiring learned that as it was not the traditional duty of either a cook or a butler to semi such a thing as a dumb waiter up and down both refused to touch it. and her food continued to be earried bv hand from her remote kitch en. Trouble was nothing to them in comparison to the danger of compro mising their position. Ainsiee s .Mag azine. TAINTED ATMOSPHERES. Hoiv Fume f Alcohol mid lolnoni .liny KmlnnBer Health. Purton-oii-Trent, the center of the Fnglish brewing industries, lias the pe culiar faculty of mildly intoxicating die'st ranger within its gates. The res ident lias become accustomed to the i lildly alcoholic fumes which arise from the innumerable brewing vats, but the susceptible stranger liuds ex hilaialioti and finally a mild form of Intoxication in the atmosphere an ef fect which does not wear off for sev eral hours after his arrival. On every hand the big brewing houses are throwing off fumes from the vats of malted liquors, and. while these are im perceptible to the resident, more than a thousand authentic instances are -aid to have been recorded of persons to whom the air has proved to possess properties that both cheer and inebri ate. Just as in certain parts of the west die arsenioiis fumes from the smelters destroy vegetation and imperil health, he vapors of the Knglish brewing cap ital destroy the sobriety of the abstain er and till his head with vagrant fan cies. As many visitors to the place are u p'.ated by a desire to see for them sehes the great industry which they ire doing their modest best to suppress itid as they are the most sensitive to the atmosphere of the town, those who gain their living from the brew houses take great delight-in observing these iit -limitary lapse- from principles. New York H.-rald. The lied Jacket Mi'ilal. Before the North American colonies revolted it was the British custom to pre-eiit medals to Indian chiefs with whom treaties were made. These med als bore a figure of the reigning Brit ish sovereign on the obverse and em blems of peace on the reverse and were called Indian medals. After the licclaration of Independence Washing ton presented a diked States medal to ihe Seneca chief. Sa go-ya-wat-lia i He Keeps Them Awakei. who was ku .wn top u la tdy as Ibtl Jacket. This Led Jacket medal is interesting as oue of the earliest of the initials issued by the lir-t president of the great repub !ic across Ihe sea. Pearson's Weekly. Iler Idea of eee.slti"s. The young man was interviewing the. stern parent of the only girl in tho world. "Of course, sir." he said, "my .-alary is not colossal, but I can give her all the necessities of life and si.fiie of its luxuries." "My tlear Mr. Softly." replied the stern parent, "you have scarcely im proved your time in her society if you do not know that she considers all the luxuries of life far more necessary than the necessities." The Vice of Idlviifwrt. Of all vices to which young men be come slaves idleness is by no means the least. It is a vice easily contracted in youth and hard to throw off in man hood or old age. difortiiuately It Is not generally looked upon as an evil In the sense that drinking, gambling and debauchery are evils, yet its Intluence is no less certain In breaking down character and sapping physical aud lu tellectuat strength. Portland Orego man A Painter's !!ri'ii rm. A friend on -c et.tered the studio Of fie-.; go iniie-s. the American land scape painter, while he was at work and remarkiil that the picture on the easel seemed to him much better than certain former works of the artist. "Bight!" said Inness. "This Is going to be one of my best things, ami the reason is that I have had the good luck to break inv right arm ami am obliged j to paint with my left hand. You see." ; he added, showing his right hand iu a j sling, "this hand had become so darned J clever that I could not catch up with 1 it. and it painted away without me. while this hand" - showing the left. with which he held his brush-"is awk ward ami can do nothing without me." IIln Brethren. Smart Pastor -My congregation Is made up mostly of fools. Parishioner Ah, that explains It! Smart Pastor Explains what? Parishioner Your habit of addressing them as "beloved brethren." Cleveland Leader. She Made Good. "I don't see what sense there is in you women dressing so expensively." "That's Just the way papa used to talk." "Talks that way yet. doesn't he?" "No. Indeed. When I caught you he admitted. that there was method In my madness." Ilouston Post. " v