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About The Oregon scout. (Union, Union County, Or.) 188?-1918 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1889)
FOREIGN GOSSIP. Dancing A .said to bo declining In popularity in England. Tlio wives of Msldl. tho great Af rican chief, are his ministers of state, lie has f.OO of them. Thoy run tho whole kingdom. One of the rules of tho Royal Li brary in Berlin, made with a view to preserving quiet and order, calls for Slhe exclusion of all members of tho gentler sex. The Kmperor of Japan is rich. Ho is atlowcd s?'-.r )0,003 a year for his household department and his private fortune is large and increasing. Tho Empress of Austria carries a traveling-basket llttcd up so that sho is able to make soup on tho cars. It lias silver sauce-pans with gold han dles, and the Empress declares that sho can make in it better broth than any chef can concoct. A society called "The Christian Union" has been formed in England for the severance of the British Um pire from the opium trallle. Tho In come of the British-Indian Govorn ment from opium last year was $30, 000,000. The little Herman Crown Prince has a very scant nllowatieo of toys. The Emperor holds that many and cost ly toys neither increase a child's hap piness nor allow those qualities to be developed which are brought out when si child has to turn to its own resources for lilling up its leisure hours. Farmers in Southern Australia, who arc anxious to find a market in Kngland for their fruit, recently shipped a box of oranges to London and asked that it bo immediately re turned. After making the round trip the box was opened at Adelaide and contents found to bo In a most encour aging state of preservation. Eighty of the oranges wero afterwards exhibited at a meeting of the Australian Bureau of Agriculture. HUNTING THE CHAMOIS. A Sport I'liiit Involve (Sri-it I'liyileul Ht ertlon mill Alif i.V D.uiKcrs. The person who goes out in quest of chamois in December or January is likely to bag more adventures than game. In reality Alpine sport is con siderably tamer than tho passing tour ist usually supposes. Chamois stalk ing, though the few who practice it de clare it to be tho most exciting of all pastimes, is for the most part, at least in Austria, left entirely to the poach ers. Tho physical exertion it requires, the danger it involves, and the rarity, or rather the entire want of staunch and well-trained hounds, account for this. Hotli tho chamois and tho roo are driven, but in a way suited to tho character of tho country and impossi ble on an English estate. Long be foro dawn the guests who are invited to take part in a chamois hunt as semblo at an appointed place. Then the steep climb into tho valley which is to be tho scene of operations begins. Whets tho proper posi tions are reached the head for ester assigns to each of tho guests a placo near ono of tho passes tho chamois are likely to take. All theso ambushes are hidden from the heights above by rocks and bushes, and thoy are always from thro 1 to four hundred, usually more than one thousand feet apart. When once a sportsman has been placed he is expected to remain where ho is tis silently as ho can. Ho must not leave his post on any account, as this might not only disturb the drive hut endanger his own, life. At about the same timo as tho hunting party leave their rendezvous a party of drivers accompanied by dogs start from tho other sido of tho mountain range. Tho noiso they mako frightons the chamois over tho crest, and, if tho parties have been properly organized, into tho valley, where a warm welcomo has boon propared for thorn. Except in very rare cases, thoso who are posted above are expected to allow tho herd to pass boforo shooting, in order not to spoil tho sport of thoir friends below. Tho huutsmon must of course always be placed so that tho wind blows to ward and not from thorn. Roo are for the mosi part shot in a similar way, though roe stalking is by no means un usual. Saturday Review. PHYSICAL HEALTH. The I'nefillnixH fif .'Mil illy Oilmen III ICeep ini; liji Niilliui.il Streuiftli. The interest takon in this country in athletic sports may sometimes assume an exaggerated form, but It is not to bo discouraged. Tho sound mind in ho sound body is still tho sensible maxftn. The Greoks wisely trained the body in conjunction with intellect ual pursuits, and the Germans owo a great debt to Frederick Ludwig Jahn for his establishment of Gymnasia. The present greatness of Prussia is largely owing to tho Tumor schools, although thoy woro suppressed at ono time on tho score of a tondoncy to libor alisin. Tho indomitable spirit which has over animated tho Kngllsh people lias been kopt allvo by Hold sports and physical exereisos generally, ana tho tendency to ovorstrainod nervous or ganizations wl.lcb tho American ell mute superinduces can only bo offot by vigorous out-of-door habits or bomu gymnastic training. Walking, riding shouting, swimming, baso-ball. cricket, fencing, sDurring. and, indeed, the on tire round of manly game, involving phjMt-ul culture, are useful In keeping up a hardy and determined people, uMe to maintain with their stout arms what their HiitMMlord have givm them iii Mif"kopliig. Sound thought, firm will and nouiid haulthnrc inuWy insep arable. It is certainly u natural ulll ancc Texas Sifting. BEAUTIFUL AFRICA. Wlint Chii Ho Pound In tho Oriiuil rirrtl of tlio Ilurk Continent. I Hippopotami are abundant In the J rivers and lakes, and their hides, ! when properly prepared (which is done by cutting tho skin, into long ' thin strips), will fetcli , live pounds ! apieco in South Africa, and are even of considerable valuo in England for making walking sticks, which have a beautiful, transparent, amber-like appearance. But tne great wealth of this country lies in its ivory, which is preferred to any other In tho Zanzibar market. Tho elephant abounds in the neighborhood of Killnia-njaro and Renin to tho extent of lihiny thous imls. Ho here becomes quite a mountaineer, and ranges through tho magnificent forests that clothe tho upper slopes of these giants among African peak. Tho natives waylay his forest tracks with artfully-devised pit falls and traps, preferring this mote cowardly way of procuring their ivoy to facing the elephant in the chase. Other tribe to the north and west of Kiliina-njaro kill the elephant with poisoned arrows or javelins or sharp swords. Indeed, there Is one district on tho northern borders of Masni-land. where, according to Mr. Joseph Thomson, "elephants are said to swarm unmolested and their ivory to rot untouched, for the people of tho surrounding region have no trading relations with any one, and do not mow the valuo of tho precious article. A tusk worth 10 in England may be (licked up for nothing, or bought from .my native for a pennyworth of beads. " However this may be, whether the elo- iilinnts are slain for tlieir ivory, or - i. .1... -,f 1 wiiuincr, iis in uie uuus ui oinunu tho Sailor," there are districts in which the tusks m-iy bo simply gath ered from among the bones of ele phants who for centuries have died, and died untouched. in these untravoled wilds, ivory is procured somehow and in such quantities even with the ab surdly inadequate existing means of exploitation and porterage that there is always more than enough to supply tho many native caravans led by Mos lem traders from the coast which an nually traverse this country between the Victoria Xyanzn and the Indian Ocean. Another item of li-ide should not bo forgotten, namely, tho valuable and handsome wild-be ist skins which may either bo procured in the chase or very cheaply purchased from the na tives. A leopard's skin may be bought for about ''s. or .'is worth of goods, and will sell on the coast for 8s. or l)s. Lions' skins are less easy to obtain from the natives, as that animal is rarely killed by ihom, but tho com pany's sportsmen might shoot him to considerable extent, as ho is botli com mon and bold. Monkey skins of the handsome variely of bushy, whi(,o tailed colobus, which is alono found In this region, are valuable and fetch a good price on the coast. II. H. John ston, in Fortnightly Review. WANTED MORE LIGHT. Hob llurilotto AiMrcHHiM ll KetMiot tn till) I'lfty. First CniiisrtMt. Permit mo to suggest a measure of reform and relief which the LI. Con gress might puss and which would ro llect great luster upon President Har rison's Administration. It might be entitled "A Bill for the Relief of Peo ple who Walk In Darkness," or "An Act to Prohibit the Use of Gas by Peo ple who Can Not Afford It." And I'll toll you why I favor such legislation. I am fond of tho light; 1 love airy houses with many windows and not too many shades; 1 enjoy bright rooms at night; I dislike slcoping in a dark room; 1 don't care to sleep under an eleetrie light and I know that dark ness rests tho eyes, but I al ways want enough light around to enable mo to distinguish a rooking chair from a bureau and a door from a window. But wo can get along well enough whon we are asleep; what wo want is plenty of light whon wo are awako. Well, now; you know the house 1 mean: you have been in it, where tlio people burn gas and econo mize with it, A parlor as big though not quite so cheerful as tho morgue, if "lighted" that isn't tho word I want, ixactly. but you know what 1 mo an y one burner In a chandelier of half a uozeii, and tlio dim religious light makes you feel as though you wero at tending your own funeral. Suppose you are a guest and como out of your own room, leaving the gas burning brightly; if you will return in live minutes you will find that some careful body has been in there and turned the gas down till it turns blue. If you vont ure to turn a gas jot on to a full head, that you may read, tho minute you lay down tho book somebody turns down tho gas. Thoro is ono drop-light in the sitting-room; around this ray of cheer fulness tlio family gathers, now and thon looking timidly over their shoul ders toward tho shadows that lurk In tho gloomy eoriiors of tho room. The house, from sunset to bed-time, is hro;idod in a ghastly twilight no sort of joke intended; it's n subject too solemn for jesting. There is no econ omy in this short of thing; gas bills never vary; and It's no way to live. A dim. religious tight is tho bos light to go to sleep by, but it's heathenish mm wicked to livoby. Burdotto, in Brook lyn liable. London has a poor-Belief society that received as contributions trnrmenU Instead of money. Each member U obliged to contribute two garment n year. Thew are disposal of in various ways by the odleors of the so- : ty. Soma are sold ut low price tc tin- iHor; some are given away; and boino art kept in stock and loaned. HOW DIMES ARE MADE now tlii I.lttlo Coins -re Turiinl Out liy tlio sun rriinoi.ro Mint. Tho silver dime Is :i useful little coin, and just at present thv seem to bo In demand; so much so that the San Fran cisco mint is turning them out at a great rate. The process of dime-making is an interesting one. The silver bullion Is first melted and run Into two-pound bars. These In turn are run through Immense rollers and tlattened out to tho thickness of the coin These sil ver strips are then passed through a machine, which cuts them into proper size for the presses, tho strips first having been treated with a kind of tallow to prevent tlieir being scratched hi their passage through the cutters. The silver pieces are then put into tlio feeder of the printing presses, and are fed to the die by automatic ma chinery at the rate of 100 per minute. 48.000 dimes being turned out in a regular working day of eight hours. As the smooth pieces are pressed between the ponderous printing dies, they receive the lettered and figured impression in a manner similar to that of a paper pressed upon a form of type. At the same time, the piece is expanded in a slight degree, and the small corrugations are cut into its rim. The machine drops the completed coin into a receiver, and it is ready for the counter's hands. Tho instrument used by the counter is not a complicat ed machino by any means, as one might suppose, it is a simple ooppor-colorod tray, having raised ridges running across its surface at a distance apart tho exact width of a dime. Eroni tho receiver tho money is dumped on the board or tray, and as It is shaken rapidly by the counter the pieces settlo down into the spaces be tween tho ridges. All these spaces be ing filled, the surplus coin is brushed back into the receiver, and the counter lias exactly LLViO dimes, or $1U.", on his tray, which number is required to fill the spaces. Tho tray is then emptied Into boxes, and tho money is ready for shipment. The dime docs not pass through the weigher's hands, as does the coin of a larger denomination. One and one half grains is allowed for variation, or 'tolerance," in all silver coins from a dollar down, and tlio deviation from tho standard in the t'li-eent pieces is so trilling that the trouble and expense of weighing coins of this denomination is dispensed twith. Golden Days. STYLISH PARASOLS. Novelties rrnilureil for tho Coming' Spring iiikI Summer Seimous. The new parasols for spring and summer are covered faillo or armuro silk in plain colors or richly brocaded, or with striped silks, plaids or bord ered patterns, and very dressy para sols have thin gauze, silk muslin or not covers brocaded with tinsel in do signs like embroidery. Tho handles are of natural woods holly, acacia, bamboo, cherry or ebony with curi ously twisted hoops or large hooks or knobs at tho ond, or olso thoy are quaintly carved and tipped with silver or gold. Coaching parasols and thoso for general uso have handles that ex tend fourteen inches beyond tho edgo of tho silk cover when closed. Tho Dircctoiro parasols to bo used with walking toilottes havo much longer handles, liko walking-sticks, oxtond Ing eighteen inches beyond tho covor, and these handles are now put to gether with a screw joint so that thoy may bo taken apart and doubled small enough to go into a very small trunk. Rich brocades of tho last century In dull colors and with metallc designs aro appropriate cov ers for theso parasols whon ieant for dress, while for morning walks tho striped and bordered silk covers aro used. A novel foaturo insido tho now Cleopatra parasols is a ribbon trim ming winding around tho stretchers that hold tlio parasol opon as thoy ra diato from tho stick; when tho parasol Is closed theso ribbons show boyoud the tips, and a cluster of loops is formed around tho stick, giving a full, bunchy effect that Is considered very stylish. Faillo parasols of green or of gray shades aro mado to correspond with many of the spring stuffs for dresses. Striped parasols must bo striped around instead of down tho breadths, and thoso with wido stripes aro pre ferred. Tlio ferule at tho top is vory long, and is pointed in parasols that havo cane handles. Black parasols havo now designs of molro, palm, ovals, or largo balls on faillo grounds. For mourning aro Rhadzlmlr parasols with curved ebony sticks. For piazzas and carriage uso in midsum mer aro white and gold bro ended silk parasols, or pale old roso, or blue brocades in leaf and ostrich feather designs, or olso em broidered silk muslin or net is put plainly over white, black, gray, rose or empire.greon silk of tho shado as the transparent fabric A bow of tho silk or of tho ribbon is tied on tho handle in full loops, and a loop of passomonterlo co-d is also added there, through which the arm is passed to carry tho parasol when it is not hoist ed. Suii-uinbrellas havo a short eight inch handle tipped with gold or silver, and are coverud with black taffeta silk. For tho country aro cotton sattoon and gingham parasols in large figures and plaids, with either short or long han dles. India silk is also prettily mount ed for parasols to match tho summer dros with which It Is worn. Small turned-over shades for uso In curly spring are made up of silks, or thoy havo luce covers all In one piece in the fashlou of long ago. Ilurpor'a Buzur. TAMING A CANARY. How ii lllr.l Miiy lip Tunc lit to Perch tTon III Muster's Nose. The method I have followed In tho earlier training of canaries is not orig inal with me. I am Indebted therefor to a Catholic priest, whoso entire suc cess therein encouraged mo to mako some efforts on the same linos. There are two Important prelimi naries in the process: First, you must havo no one else in tho vicinity of the bird's cage or. better still, in tho room: and second, a rare degree of patience is requisite. Of these two essentials, moreover. 1 would place the greater stress on the latter. The small bunch of Huff and feath- i ers and warming unceasing, whose ! dainty tricks shall form the burden of my sketch, 1 called Cap. He was of : a bright, yellow tint, but had a black spot topping his head and extending ' well down to the eyes. This ebon speck, so neatly placed, suggested his name. When he first came Into my possession Cap was a bit fraction- for a bird. Here, then, is the method by which I tamed him. At a dozen intervals in the dav I approached the cage slowly, and, placing one linger near the wires where the porch rested, instantly jerked the linger away. This action, which may seem rather foolish, I re peated over and over, but always in gentle fashion, so as not to frighten the bird, but only to excite his curi osity. , Well, it gradually dawned on the tiny brain that I was afraid of having my linger peeked the vory impression my action was meant to convey. The canary's shyness was becoming obliterated through tho novel idea that 1 was actually afraid of him! Cap began quite soon to act on this idea, and with lessening cau tion each few times. Nor did I fall to give him opportunities. By slow degrees I got closer to tho wires and intruded my linger at greater length between them, withdrawing it direct ly on the bird's approach, and if ho chanced to overtake and peek It I simulated much misery If not pain at the mishap. "Well, it. got so at last, simply by following tho above rules, that, whether Cap was eating or bathing or picking his feathers, he left off the taslc and Hew to tho side of tho cage the instant my linger -Appeared, and later on, in fact, if 1 dared to come within a yard of his territory! His enjoyment of my supposed fear of him was merged at last in genuine temper, and ho would evince it by outstretched wings, sharp squeaks, and eyes which had as much of tho devil in them as they could hold. At such unmannerly times ho stood on one leg. grasped tho wires with tho othor claws, and bade mo particular defiance. Cap was now tamed; so tho aggra tating measures employed In bringing about this condition woro gradually dropped, and a coaxing system, which varies, of course, with bird lovers, was adopted to win conlldonco where I had effectually displaced four. Onco you tamo a bird, it is advantageous to glvo him tho libortyof the room for a couple of hours every day. Ho thus has tho chance to improvo an acquaintance mado behind the bars, lint tamo him first in tho cage; this is my experience. And now let mo recount some of Cap's cute accomplishments. I have time and again had him alight on my shoulder or on tlio top of my head while 1 was writing, and ho had a trick of fluttering around or bolow from theso points and poising with porfect sang froid on tlio bridgo of my noso! This, Indeed, was his favorite coign, albeit a trillo awkward for mo. Somotlmos I placed Ills battling dish on tlio palm of my hand, which I hold out invitingly, and Cap mado not a particle of bones about alighting on tho dish rim and, after a few prepara tions, dousing down in tho water and making It fly while ho performed his ablutions. Having finished, ho would seek tho top of my head, shake him self thoroughly, and then mako tho circuit of the room warbling at tho top of his voice. My door often stood opon while Cap was out of his cage, and If I loft tho room his invariable praetico was to fly after mo and havo a "lift" down stairs on my head or shoulder; while often, whon ho hoard my stop coming up and I had previously cropt out without his scolng mo, ho would fly down to meet mo. Occasionally, through inadvertence, tlio cage door has been loft open ovor night, and Cap has awakened mo in tlio morning sit ting domuroly on tho bridgo of my noso. This may not appeal vory strongly to the credonco of tho reader, but It is a fact, as aro each of tho in stances named of my canary's talent for making himself perfectly ut homo. Cor. N. V. Sun. Somo persistent novel renders In tho British .Museum devoured as many as twenty volumes a day, and occupied their seats so persistently that tho au thorities havo been competed to issue tho rulo that novels that havo boon first published within tho proceeding live yours will not bo issued to renders unless some especial reason can bo given by thoso requiring them. A correspondent says that lie treats every man as a rascal until ho proves himself honest, and that ho finds It J saves li i in many a dollar, if the man is tionost lie will not sulTor from being watched as you would ivatoli a rascal, and if he is a rascal you will bo greatly ahead by watching him. A company with a capital of $1G0, 000 has bogn formod to build puttsuiigor tunnels under Now York City. PECULIAR ORCHESTRA. How it rrenrlitimii Mmlc n Numlier of lnrlors I'uriiNIi Music. , Tho credit of the Invention of pig music belongs to tho Abbe do Balgne. ! a great musician, who supplied the court of Louis A I. with many other curiosities in this way. The Ingenious abbe was one day asked by the Ring if lie thought It possible to produce musical sounds from the erics of pigs. I The abbe thought it was possible, and ' received a grant of money from the monarch for that purpos-. With this money ho proceeded to purchase a ' number of porkers, of different sizes and ages. and. after testing the pilcn 1 and quality of their voices, secured them fast, and arranged them in order in a large tent. He further construct ed a keyed instrument, furnished with a number of wires, tightly drawn, cor responding with the number of animals. At the end of each wire which was in side the tent, and almost touching each pig. was attached a short, sharp spike, which, when moved by the action of the key. pricked the pig and made him squeak. "By this means," says an old chronicler. "the abbe produced such harmony as to astonish the whole court." That the eat lias been pressed into tlio serv ice of musical science appears from the account given by Juan Chrlstoval, a Spaniard, of a procession which took place at Brussels at tho fetes in honor of Philip II. "The orchestra," says Chrlstoval, "was upon a largo car; in tho middle sat a great bear, playing a kind of organ ono not composed of pipes, as usual, but of twenty cats, separately confined In narrow eases, in which they could not stir. Their tails protruded from tho top, and were tied to cords attached to tho key-board of tho organ; and, according as tlio bear pricked upon tlio keys, tho cords were raised, and the tails of tho cats were pulled to make thoininew in has? or treble tones, as required by the nat ure of the airs." Live monkeys and othor animals danced to this music. "Although," continues tho chronicler, "Philip II. was the most serious of mortals, ho could not refrain from laughing boisterously." San Francisco Argonaut. CARGOES OF CRIMINALS. How Kiissliiu Conlcts Aro Vrunnportol to tin. I'eniil Colonics. The Nizhni-Novgorod is an iron steamship of about !1,800 tons burden, and is especially fitted as a convict transport. With a full complement of convicts tho vessel carries (i.r2. Tlio olllcors and crew number eighty, ox elusive of a marine convoy escort of sixty-two men especially chosen for this duty. Tho iron-barred compart ments or cages in which tho convicts aro con lined run parallol, fore and aft, on cither sido of tlio upper and lower 'tween decks. Tho Iron bars, an inch thick, of tho cages and tho woodwork in which thoy aro sot, is hoavily and solidly constructed. Tho cages aro of unequal capacity and length, but havo a uniform height of sovon and a half foot. Tho more desperate characters are manacled and chained to Iron staples in their berths, from which thoy aro released whoa necessary. Tlio greater number, although retain ing the waist and ankle shackles of light construction, have tho freodom of traversing tho length of tho compartment, which may vary from twenty-live to forty foot. Botweon tlio ! (,ulu1, bars and tho two plain plank shelves or bunks running from ond to end of the compartments, which afford stooping room for tho occupants, thoro is a free space of about four and a half or livo foot. Except during tlio dlstilbutlon of ra tions no culinary vossols aro loft with tlio convicts. Even tlio drinking wa ter is obtained only through an India rubber mouthpiece llxed In an inclosed water tank, and through which tlio drlnkor sucks his draught. Immedi ately outside tlio cages and attached to tlio under part of the dock ovorhoad Is a steam-pipe connected with tlio ship's boilors. Into those pipes aro fitted screw nozzles at intervals of twelve foot. Tho object of tho steam-pipo is to suppress any onngorous outbreak among tlio inmates of the cage. By menus of a short lioso, especially mado to resist tlio steam heat, quickly attached to ono of tho steam-pipo nozzles, tho turbulent convicts aro roiulHy quieted or par boiled. Strong vator jots have been found next to useless in allaying these occasional tumults. After tho ship has passed tho canal, but not boforo, batches of convicts aro lu turn brought upon tho deck for a shower bath and short exorcise. A strongly-constructed Iron railing, eight feet high, crosses tlio vessel amldship, in order that tho convict, during his hatband while iiiimamicled, can not by any sudden rush evade tho guard and reach tlio quartor deck. Some of tho more desperate convicts, who stubborn ly resist all disciplinary control, aro confined to tlio cagos during tho wholo voyage. Both the upper and lowor 'tween decks are open mid airy, tho system of ventilation bolng excolont, and tho cages themselves nru Icopt scru pulously cluan. Tho cages are repaint ed every voyage. Tho convict, in ad dition to having tils hair cropped short, lias tlio loft half of tho bond from front to back closely shaven. Suiisliino. Thoy are talking of having omni buses in Loudon, especially for thoso who waul to smoko when they ride. Apparently there is a Yankee in tho scheme, for it Is said that tho vehicles will be lilted up with racks of nuws pupurs, and also with drop-a-nlcklo-in tho-slol machines that will deliver ulnars, cigarettes, tobacco and matohou. HUNTING THE LION. An KiiclMiinmr Kncounter with th Klntr of lleiists. Suddenly, while the lioness charged down upon us along tho ledgo, her consort, with ono mighty bound, cleared the gully, alighting In tho vory midst of the Arabs at Its brink, and, for the moment, carrying all boforo him. We aimed carefully this timo as tho lioness sprang upon us, nnd both our bullets took effect; but It needed a second dose of lead out of our breech loaders to stretch her lifeless at our feet. Wo then hastened to the assist ance of our allies. What a sceno met our eyes. Bleeding profusely from many wounds, but in yet far from dis abled, the furious male was making sad havoc among the crowd. Crack ing a skull there with ono mighty sweep of his paw and smashing a shoulder with another, he had already strewn the ground with slain and wounded as we drew nigh to finish him with our rilles. At that very moment the spearmen wero like wise upon him. While he was scatter ing his assailants in front, more and more men had drawn near from bo- , hind, and half a dozen lances woro now plunged into him simultaneously, I bearing him to tlio ground at last, i The short but liorco struggle was over. I Our terrible antagonist lay breathing his last, with his victims around him. j Ho had killed live Arabs outright and wounded fourteen more, among whom, j to our great regret, was tho young i hero of the day, the same bravo lad whose perilous exploit wo had ad mired so much. A great broad gash from neck to shoulder will henceforth bear witness to his prowess in tho oyoa of the whole tribe. We were publicly thanked by tho chief for our modest share in tho glory of tho day, and ho informed us later on that he deemed victory cheap at tho price, considering that thirty or forty victims often fall In such encounters. Two young cubs, scarcely six months old, wero found insido the cave half smothered by tho smoko. Wo aftur ward learned that thoy had boon sent to Algiers for salo, and, for all wo know, they may now bo Inmates of some zoological gardon or menagerie. Our work was accomplished. Probably for many years to come the tribo would be exempt from similar Inlliction. With high hearts wo hold our triumphal, entry into tho village, amid shouts of victory blended with doatli wails, and with lamentations over tho many wounded. Our young horo of tho flro mot with his reward. They carried., him along in triumph, as ho lay on his roughly improvised coach, faint from, loss of blood, but elatod with tho con sciousness of his achlovoinont, no ,..l..l ,.l,l 1..,,. !,....,!.. I1IWI till UWlllll lltitU UUUII llllJJJMUl bllUIL he. The whole tribo, young and old, paid grateful homage to him as ho lay there, for "honor to whom honor Is duo" remains tlio rule with thoso unsophis ticated sous of tho wilderness, and long may it continue so. Such, then, has been our oxporlonco of lion hunting in North Africa. Fur nished with tlio host arms of precision and well supported by the indomitable pluck and ripe oxporlonco of our dusky allies, wo had found oursolvos faco to face with tho king of beasts, and, after all, had hut little right to boast of our encounter with him. Chambers' Jour nal. BULL-FIGHTING IN CUBA. (Sooil Toreiiilor Cull Coiiimnnd u Fortune In the ICver-l ultlirul lute, Tho older lovo of tho Cubans for bull-lighting Is on tho wih.no. Undoubt edly bull-lighting is still a fascinating sport for tlio old-timers, but there has boon such a succession of clowns In tho bull-ring during tho past ton years that thoy havo practically killed tho sport Whon a great bull-lighter turns up la Cuba an event which happons about onco in four or livo years ho 1b lion ized to a wonderful oxtont for a time, hut thoro Is every indication that bull lighting as a national sport has scon its host days lu Cuba. I ofton wonder what lias become of Mazznnini, who went to Cuba from Spain and foil vio lently in lovo witli Sura Bernhardt the day that ho arrived in Havana. Sara and he woro inseparable during the stay of tho Froach actross la Havana. Wtiorovor tho bull-fighter wont enormous crowds followed him. Tho conjunction of tlio Fronch actress ar.tl tho horo of tlio ring was almost too much for tlio sight-scors. Muzzanlnl was a reiiiarkahly-handsomo man and, he won his way into tho alToctlons of the people by Ills amiability and good nature. Ho was paid $G0,000 and alL his expenses for a four wooks1 tour through Cuba and Moxico. Whon It came to tlio actual business of bull fighting, however, lie proved hiiusolt more or less a muff. Tho bulls woro so tame that thoy excited his derision and ho expressed his contempt hi pan tomime to the populace. The populaco grow sulky and rofusod to attond tho bull-lights. Thon Mazzanlnl went to Moxico, whoro he also oxprossod his contempt for tho bulls and tho place generally with rather toinpostuous re sults. Tlio people polted him with chairs, benches and every thing olso thoy could lay thoir hands on, and thon shot at him casually us ho rushed out of the ring. I saw a woman bull-fighter once In Havana, but the bull sho was to fight proved to be a calf, Tlio populace con ceived itself to bo insulted, Sonom Gloria was imprisoned for seven mouths and all the proceeds of tho light woro given over to charity. All of this allows that it Is not safe to fool with tho hot Southern blood of tho people of the tropica. Cubun Cor. Philadelphia Times.