till accuracy of lire during n IMVftl ; engngement when ns n rule ouc shot SAVED BY A MIRACLE IN A IMILROAD WRECK. In twenty makes n lilt would make tlio American battleships tlie terror of the seas. ) THE TIMES. I In Millp of higher criticism there arc men who bellcvo there Is a great profit la whales. The annexation of Cuba proceeds npacc. A nlco American girl has an noiod President Talma's son. If John T. Morgan finds .those "un digested securities" troublesomo be might absorb a pepsin plant or two. It Is now snld that a liberal use of roast bef Is good for consumption. Cat' tletnfn hare long known that It Is good for production. Kerr Most Is out of prison again, This would be an excellent time for him to reform and go to work for n "T'nS- Materialistic people claim that It Is Just as easy for a poor man to love n wealthy glrl-but they neglect to tell him how to make her love him. Tho wreck of the .talno will be raised by Cuba. Kternlty Is hardly long enough to Justify an attempt to resurrect tho Spanish navy. Two barons and a count figured In the New York courts the other day on account of unpaid debts. The poor fellows were nil married before they reached this country. To the great statesman that falls to secure the honor of having a txent clear named for him there Is always open the distinction of being cured of his physical ailments by some nerve medicine. Indications arc growing that China Is to become the world's storm center. Tho old struggle between a dylng-out, stubborn past and a strenuous, un truthful present Is on In the celestial empire, and can have but one ending. Naturalists tell us It Is only the fe male rabbit that believes In large fam ilies. The male parent tries to kill the young rabbits. In some parts of the world the regret Is deep and sincere that he has such poor success. II. II. Rogers, the Standard Oil mag nate, who Is worth f40.0OO.OOO or $50, 000.000, has been suffering fearful agonies because his digestive appara tus refused to go. The Standard Oil fortune seems to bo Its own punishment. The efforts of certain European bank ers to lend Venezuela the money to pay the claims of the powers are a little peculiar In view of the bad reputation as a debtor which the powers have giv en Venezuela. Are they trying to se cure ground for another demonstration some time In the future? Young Mr. Hopkins, aged 32. with $275,000 In his Inside pocket In the shape of letters of credit, loft the other day for n Journey of 2f,000 miles. Mr. Hopkins represents a Western Jubb'tig house. Although he takes his wife nlong with him. he Is not traveling en tirely for pleasure. He Is golug over to China and Japan to buy tea. This man has learned about all there Is to be known concerning tea. The head of his Jobbing house knows more about the finances of the tlrm, the credit man more about the retail trade and the head bookkeeper more about the books, but Mr. Hopkins knows more about ten than all of them put together. The tlrm wanted to buy heavily of ten. The best way to buy It was to send nn ex pert to the places -where It Is grown. Hopkins was the export. There Is a lesson In this Incident for young men, because It Is typical of the modern business trend. lluslness, like the pro fessions. Is coming more and more to bo specialized. Tho man who knows how to do ono thing better than auy OPINIONS OF GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS Ctrry One Should lmproo Ills Mind. ' DUUATION olioutil end only with dotith. The man or woman who thinks that one Is completely educated In schools and colleges Is mistaken, for the most that scholastic training can do Is stnrt one well, show one the right limit of learning and wis doni. and despatch the student forward with a godspeed. The human mind Is susceptible of nlmost limitless de vclotmicut and expansion, and there Is no ago at which the Improvement of It must stop. And It ought to be every man's ambition to make his mind ns nearly full and perfect ns It can be made: to approach, step by step, that unattainable Ideal of Intellectual power and com plotoness, the almighty, all-knowing (lodbead, which all cultivated men, all Intellectual nations have worshipped under divers names, "Jehovah, Jove or Lord, ns the self' existing source of thought nud being l'erhaps tho majority of high school and of college graduates cense studying when they unit tho academic hall. They have their slieepsklus framed and hung upon one else In his tlrm Is the man who Is . waU ., whenever they feel the need of nu Intellectual selected to do that thing. And the MhmlI,H ,ll0 llei. , ,lu, pompous Latin Inscription, pay Is adequate because there Is little j u,y bm nwardly. and thereby remltid or no competition. However this fact must not be lost sight of: No man can be a successful specialist who Is not well Informed on other things. Hop kins must know ten better than the others. Hut he must also know other things connected with the Jobbing busi ness. To know n part one must know the whole In relation to Its parts, and the part In relation to tho wholo. Therefore the necessity for an all- round education to begin with. Hut In the end It Is Hopkins, the specialist, who goes abroad Intrusted with $-73, 000. The specialist wins success In the old way by deserving It What Is tho difference between baV' Ing four wives and being an outright polygamist and having had four dl Torces and taken a new wife each time? The one practice Is called polyg amy and the other "marriage Infelic ity," or what you wilL How much difference Is there In principle? A Missouri preacher has declared that hereafter he will tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth In delivering funeral sermons. It Is suspected that this clergyman does not! care very much about omclatlng at funeral services anyway. At least his calls after this declaration are likely to be few and not close together. Many guilty persons escape Justice by the sharp practice of criminal law yers. Indeed, with a skillful attorney and plenty of money on the side of the defense the life penalty for any crime Is the exception. Under complex laws and Involved practice the benefit of the doubt may be easily stretched to shield the guilty, and this occurs so often that there Is reason to despair of exact and full Justice by the process of the courts. In Kansas City recently the brewers agreed among themselves that they would not sell beer to a certain saloon keeper until he jiad paid a bill he owed to one of them. The matter was taken Into court and the court held that the combination was In restraint of trade and therefore unlawful. In Milwau kee the beef dealers made a black list on which was the name of a retailer to whom they refused to sell meat un til be paid certain bills. This matter also went Into court, but tho court held that tho black list was a privi leged communication and was there fore perfectly legal. It Is said by experts that the finest antique, colonial furniture In this coun try comes from the South. Much of It has been discovered In the cabins of iged negroes who were formerly slaves. When these rare, carved old pieces of mahogany were discovered by their masters they were often given to the negroes, not understanding the valua tion of them that would come later. A richly carved mahogany sideboard was found recently 'In a chicken roost In one of the Southern States. The chickens roosted on It every night and It was worn and battered. This was bought by a dealer for a small sum, nud after It was restored sold to a cus tomer for $250. The gun crews on our warships are doing Bonie extraordinary accurate shooting of late. On tho Illinois, tir ing at a stationary target while the vessel was movltig. n score of twelve lilts out of thirteen shots was made with her thlrteen-lnch guns at n dis tance of five miles. Tho gunners of tho Iowa, steaming at twelve knots past a stationary target, made thirty hits out of thirty shots with six pounder rapid tiro guns. This feat was accomplished by three gun crews, each having ten Bhots. It beats all records. At San Francisco tho sub marine torpedo boat Grampus dis charged a torpedo at n range of 350 yards nud struck a stationary target g,unrely lu tho center. Anything liko Since the STpanlsh-Amerlcan war much thought has been given by those llrectly Interested to the training of our citizens In the mllltla. This awnk cnlng-of Interest on the part of the public as well as of the military au thorltles has probably been greater on account of the war In South Africa, which demonstrated clearly that citi zen troops, with the right sort of train ing, and on the defensive, could bold their own against a vastly superior at tacking force for a long time. It proved also that the war of the future Is like ly to bear a much stronger rcsera blance to guerrilla or frontier conflict than to the great wars of the past. True, nobody can tell what the erratic course of history may be, but this much seems certain, that If the United States should at any future time be come Involved In war, the training of the mllltla will be an Important factor In the outcome. The cowboys, ranch men and scouts of the West could without much trouble be mobilized Into an effective fighting force, though their discipline from a mlltary point of view might be defective. But the conditions which produced this race of fighting men nrc already of the past, and In another generation there will be only heredity to count on in making up Western troops. These will no longer consist of veterans In frontier war fare, men who are accustomed to find their lives depending on their skill with the rifle. The Westerners of the future will be only the sons and grand sons of such men. It follows, there' fore, that to be effective the mllltla of the future must be taught to shoot They must, so far as possible, -be sharpshooters, active, practical, re sourceful Drill and discipline come second. The spirit of discipline Is es sential, but not Its form. If the men are the right sort, and are trained to shoot, our citizen soldiery ought to stand against a drilled and disciplined army. It Hun In tho Family. That boy will be the death of me some day," declared the bead of the family. "I'm sure I don't know where he gets all his Impudence and self assurance; surely not from me. He returned home from college the other day to spend the holidays, as I supposed, and, entering my office he threw his bat on the floor, selected an easy chair, put bis feet on my desk, lit a cigarette. Inhaled a few puffs, and then, turning, languidly to me, he drawled: "'I say, dad, do you remember the time when you were sent home from college ?' I did. There was no use denying It, for one day. In a burst of confi dence, I bad told blm some of my escapades as a boy, and lived to re gret that I bad been so Indiscreet. Well, said he, 'history has re peated Itself.' 'What do you mean, you young scalawag?" I roared. 'O,' said he, easily, 'I've been sent home, too. Astonishing, Isn't It, dad, how such things will run In a fam ily?'" Stray Stories. themselves that they have complete educations, ltut a college education Is n machine which will rust nud rot un less It Is polished nud kept lu use. Do not attempt too much. This is a busy age, and the mnn who has his living to earn must give the cream of his energy and most of hi time to the work by which he get bread and butter, ltut nearly every man has some leisure for reading Every man and woman ought to read, especially, the Lnsllh masters of proe and poetry: the ancients as well as the modern. And It Is an excellent thing to have at least a reading kuowltdgo of some modem language, pre ferably I-reneh or German, for thoe tongues have the greatest literature. It Is said that oue I ns many times n man as the number of languages he knows. Certain It Is that the possession of another than one's mother tongue broadens the Intellect and gives tbe'mlnd new standards of comparison and a cosmopolitan polut of view. San Trail- elsco Ilulletln, Li Cxtlrpate ll dropliobhi. AST year fourteen person In Chicago died of hydro phobia. The horror of these deaths need not be dilated upou. Hydrophobia Is no tender mode of death. No Chinaman Impaled on a stake, no African -lied to nil ant hill, no American In dlau staring nt the sun with eyes from which tin lids had been removed ever suffered greater tor incuts, than In our own day and In our own city fall to the lot of the victims of u disease which Is coiiuuunl cable and preventable, ltelng communicable and prevent able. Its continuance Is a reflection on our humanity aud on our Intelligence. In England. Scotland and Wales hydro phobia Is almost unknown. Humanity and Intelligence have done their work there. It Is time for them to do their work here. Let all citizens, whether on the police force or not, re member that they are proving fnle to their social nud civic duties If they allow the lives of their neighbors to be endangered by unmuzzled or unchained dogs. Diligent work for a few weeks will put all such dogs lu tho pound. It would lie a tardy but welcome relief If Chlcagoans could feci during this summer for the first time In the history of the city that when they walked their streets they did not have to reckon hydrophobia among the possibilities of their excursion. Oue more point, however. Is to be noted. Itnbles Is not simply a summer canine complaint. It happen In winter as well as In summer. The notion that mud dogs are to he feared only during the summer Is exploded. If the dog catchers will catch aud destroy every dog that Is without a tag. and If they will. In this way, rid the town of Its present horde of disease brooding nud disease conveying cum, a great deal will have been done to reduce the hydrophobia dealh into. Get rid of all unlicensed, untagged canine vagabonds; muzzle all respectable caultio pels from he 1st of April to tho 1st of November; the deaths we die will be ploasunlor. -Chicago Tribune G llcfornt In Uussln. .Alt NICHOLAS II. takes matters Into Ids own hands with something of the autocratic spirit of his great grandslre and namesake, 'lliero shall, ho says, be reforms. There shall be freedom of creed and wor- ship not only, we assume, for Catholic and Protest nut. ns well as for Orthodox, but also for Jew, as well as for Christian. There shall bo no more slavery under tho name of "forced labor." There shall be reform In church and state, and especially lu tho village communes, which are the .foundation of the empire. These things tho mln later and other otlleers are peremptorily commanded to execute. It Is a great decree. If It I sincere, as wo are bound tb assume, and If It Is lutlexlbly enforced, as we are bound to hope and to expect, It will effect tho first stage In that beuelleent evolution of Itusshi, which seems to be the only alternative to resolution. Tor a change must come. It would be simply hnpos slide for Russia to go on for ever, or much longer, in hei old repressive, reactionary, barbaric style. "The people will come to their own ut last, God Is not mocked for ever." It was an amazing anachronism that Uussln got through the nineteenth century and Into Die twentieth with a pulltl cat. social and Industrial system belonging to the Middle Ages. That system cannot much longer endure. Iteform must come, or revolution; and the Csar scorns, wisely and bravely to have chosen that It shall be reform, lu his efforts for the welfare of his people he will have the hearty sympathy of the world, and If he Is successful lu them he will have a place lu history not second to nuy lu all the line of lturlk. New York Tribune. Spread of tho Uiblo. WHATEVElt view we may take of higher crltl cl.stn, the spread of the lllble will go on. It will be read as a story even by those who do not regard It ns a sacred book. The tales of the Patriarchs and of the great men of Israel will not easily fade out of the Inmian early world. They will not easily fade out of the human mind. They bring to us the poetry of the early world. They have the prltul live glow. It was not merely a a missionary that George Morrow carried the lllblo throughout the length and breadth of Spain. It Is not solely ns a religious book that ISO.Hmi.oOO lllhlcs have been accepted from the llrltlsh lllble Society, and that a steady How of ltl.000 n day pours forth from their depots. It Is partly as the most human of nil the documents handed down by the human race. There fs very little pure dogma In the lllble. Most of the dogmas of the Churches were evolved In the succeeding centuries, struck out like sparks by the application of the precise Greek mind to nn Oriental theme. We listen lo the story of human life lu all Its variety and pathos, and from It there grow, like flowers from some rich soil, the great utterances on life and conduct which still nets as pillars of fire to lead us on. 1'rom the rooms of the lllble Society this flood of books goes forth like wnter to Irrigate the world. It spreads out gradually, carried by missionaries and colporteurs, translated Into every tongue, carried across deserts and sens and with It the light spreads too. A lllble Is left on some Island, and there fur the first time the Islanders have a literature. It Is placed In a prison, aud there the weary oaplhe, reading It In sonic listless hour, finds light and hope. We talk about tho "trade following the flag." The trade we speak of Is not always of the best. Hut here Is n trade which will not shame any flag trade In something more precious than rubles and brighter than diamonds. Loudon Dally N'ews. i WANTED HIS MONEY'S WORTH, Merely n Suggestion. Miss Uusch "I'm sure something has happened to Clarence my fiance, you know. He started for Iloston two box an' drive to thunder. I alu't never days ago and I haven't heard from played I was merchandise yet, an' I Would Not Hire Cab Unless He Could Do tlio Driving. It was evident that he was not a cfty man, for he looked at tue cnu long and doubtfully before deciding to hlic It. "Funny lookln' thing." he muttered, with the driver's sent out over tho tall of It; but I got to play all the games there Is, so here gees." He moved up to the waiting cabby. "I want to hire tho go-cart fer a while," he announced. "All right, sir," said the cabby. Where do you want to go?" "Say!" was the" Indignant response, seems to me you're glttln' pretty gay. What Is It to you where I want to go, s'long ns 1 pay the price? Think I'm goln' to run away with the two wheclcd box?" "No, sir, certainly not," returned the cabby. "Pleasure, ride, I suppose want to sec the sights. Get right In, and "Git lu!" exclnlmed tho strnugor. "Well, I guess not. Think I want to ride lu that caboose? No, sir. I'll git on top. "ltut that's my place," protested the cabby. "How can I drive "Drive! Who's askln' you to drive? D'you think I'm hlrlif this hearse so's I kin play the part of the late lament ed? Not any. I'm a llvo man, I am. I'm pnyln' fer a live man's fun. Git In yourself." "Hut I can't do that, sir." "Why not? You're stnaller'n I am." "I mean I must drive." "Then what's the fun fer me? I was lookln' fer u little Joy dodgln' things, nn' I sure ain't goln' to pay you fer ludulglu' lu the sport. If you got to drive, why. take your ol" upright plnno QUEER COMMUNICATIONS THAT COME THROUGH THE MAIL TO THE WHITE HOUSE Tn,E Tres day froi executlv Idea of Perhaps tho most curious, wreck In tho history of railroad disasters occurred some time ago In Arizona. Tlio Mnrlcnpn and Phoenix train was rushing across the Tempo llrldge, eight tulles from Plmviili. when n span of the bridge gae way. hurling the engine and three ears to tho dry, sandy bed below, It was a mixed train, the first throe cars being freight cats and the rest passenger carriages. The fourth car, tilled with passengers, hung poised over the edge, leetorlug apparently In a shiver of doubt Hud It fallen It must have dragged the next car wild It, and Hut occupants of both would have boon crushed In tho debris. It hung, however, half on und half off the bridge, ns ready to Jump Into space, lipped down at illlo nu angle toward tho ground. The passengers nil got out safely. Tho only fatality In this accident was that of n Plum . Indian who was stealing n'lide aud got caught lu the debris. blm since.1 Miss Ilrutle "Why not advertise?" Miss Gusch "Advertise?" Mr. Urutle "Yes; say, 'Lost A fiance; wore high collar; answers to name of Clarence,' or something like that." Philadelphia Press. ain't goln' to begin now." Hrooklyn Euglo. MILLIONS WHO DINE OUT. New York Kettaiirnnls Do Not Supply the Dcniund. Within the past six mouths the res- The Inspired Idiot. tnurunt business or .M'lV .ork, panic- Every cloud may have a sliver ularly nbove '.'3d street, has undergone lining," said the Inspired Idiot, "but B reiuniknblo expansion. Not only has when n man Is cnucht In a heavy the --business of tho more fushlonablo shower he can't help thinking they dining resorts grown to nn extruordl are lined with tho poorest quality of 'W extent, but tho prevailing prosper zinc or tin." Haltlmore Herald. "J' has been equally shared In by tho , . less preieniious rcHinuruuis, -me pro- exploring Thebes prlctor of one of the medium-priced Mr. Davis, the American who has restaurants on 1 1 road way, who was expended considerable sums In explor- nsked about the Increased patronage of Ing works near Thebes, Egypt, has his place last night, explained It thus: found a splendid chariot In tho tomb "In tho first plnco Ilroadways is of King Thotbtnes. growing ns a popular dining resort; , , , , , , secondly, moro peoplo ore In this lo- Hero Is n nickel for you," a man said ,.i,. ,i, ,., i ,,- ,i ,vm, ,i, to a boy to-day. "and you needn't luy Vuum).u.RUla tunnel looming up ahead - ,, . , . .,. , j Have ( besltatcd to renew my leaso Ing "say thank you" as a parrot Is of ,,, ,,,, ,,, .,,,, ,,. hearing "Polly wants a cracker." -,,,w... wn i, -,. a ,, Whenever we see a man on a ster- as tho noonday rush Is over we begin ladder, we begin to calculate wblcb t make preparations for tho crowds way be will go when be falls. that ilock hero for the ufght dinner. President gets a large number of "fake" or "queer" letters every from Insane people nil over the United States and Europe. I ho rutlve receives a great quantity of mail, hut few people have nn the amount of this "fake" mall that It falls to the lot of the President's secretary to open. The mall for the President Is handled In the official mail room nt tho city post office In Washington and Is delivered nt the White House by n special carrier detailed from the force of employes nt the executive mansion. Thero nrc six letter cases In this room, mid each ease contains ono box for tho mall of tho President and bis family. Tho number of letters for the Presi dent alone runs from 300 to 400 a day, aud from ten to fifteen of these nro the "fake" letters. There Is one man In California who has been writing lo the various Presi dents for a number of yenrs. He numbers each letter, and the Inst received was No. 3(H). In the upper left-hand corner Is written the rather startling Information, "Prom Jesus Christ." One of these missives was oiiened somo time ngo by permission of tho President's secretary and found to contain only n number of unintelligible hleroglyphlcsjsomethlng liko shorthand. Of courso they find their way ultimately Into the waste paper basket nt tho present the Importer In question, who tiuuu uouse, uui tney are not uesiroyeu ni mo post ouiec. I H traveling on business,' paid a visit Anothes "freak" who has nlso been writing to the Presidents for yenrs to Herlln, culled on tho linn and spoke scorns envelopes and stomps and uses postal cards altogether. If ho does not 0f tho dispute In which ho had been finish what he has to say In one he. takes another, numbering them cousocu- worsted. The wealthy Creole was not tlvely. Sometimes be uses ns many as llvo or six. Ho signs himself "MI- little nstonlshcd to learn that all chad, King of Heaven," and his communications nre usually In tho form the arguments, had been formulated of commands to tho President on the way In which the United Htntes should nnd tho letters written by n young bo run. During the period of tho Spanish war ho wroto almost every day adf. lie asked to see her, fell In love and gave orders as to the movements of the fleets lu Aslntle waters. Wth her on tho spot, proposed and was Not very long ngo n letter was received addressed to "George Washington, accepted then and there, and thus his President of the United Stales." Letters como addressed Jo tho President In business trip had developed Into a all sorts of ways. Ills real title Is "Tho President," but ho gets them nil delightful wedding tour. Tho dress- from "His Majesty" and "nis Excellency" dowu to "Teddy ltoosevelt.-Cbl- mnltlng firm Is rw besieged with np- cago Itccord-Herald. plication, for a post which offers such -- attractive possibilities. FMEAK8 OF FORTUNE. Ciirtmia Turns of Iter Wheel hi If ti sin. Holy and tlerimitljr. Fortune's wheel has lately played a few Interesting pranks lu the destiny of mere men lu Itussla and Italy which remind one of the wonders of Ahid lln's lamp, says the Loudon Telegraph I'lius n poor fellow named Shnlyapln who a few years ago labored long and hnrd fur his dally bread In various Itusslan cities, standing on the low est rung of the ladder, Is now tin prince of Ituss'nti singers, nud whnt Is more, n splendid actor over nud .ihove. Whenever he appears before the footlights the Theater Is crowded lo the celling and the manager has to "turn money away." In Italy a sudden revolution of the fateful wheel hud produced n similar result, and Slg. Glorglnul. who wn only n fishmonger somo eight month ago. Is n theatrical star of the very first magnitude to-day. lie was noted until Inst year for the loud, silvery voice with which he was wont lo cry out and praise his tinny wares lu the nnrkct-plnec, drawing n considerable rowd of buyers nwny from his com petltors. Oue day a lover of music hnuclng lo pass that way heard the Milce aud declared that there were money nnd music In It. Olorglotil thereupon changed Ihe llsh market Jttr music school nnd has now made his Hist appearance before the public nt Naples with a triumph which breaks ill records. The walls of the San Carlo (heater quaked with the thunder of the npplauso which greeted the ex- .Ishmongyr. and musical crlllca are squandering upon bis performance the upcrlntlvc of all the adjectives of iralso In their vocabulary. Ho Is creil lily asserteil to he Ihe prince of Italian oners and a likely candidate for the championship of the world Prizes In life's lottery nre restricted to no ono profession or calling. They tuny bo fewer In this career and more numerous In that, but they aro the monopoly of none. This universality of lucky chance was curiously exem plified n short time ago In the German capital by a woman whose occupation she was correspondent In a dress making establishment shut her out from the everyday world and left her little opportunity of bettering her posl tlon. Hut the psychological moment arrived when an Importer nut lu Mou tevldeo wrote to a Ilerlln firm saying that he refused to accept a largo con Ignmcnt of goods sent him and gnvo arlous grounds for his attitude. The woman correspondent replied to his letter with great Ingenuity nnd equal energy, nnd the correspondence, carried on for a considerable time with emnrkahly great emphasis, ended lu the triumph of Ihe lady. The goods were finally ncccpted and pnld for. At Hardly a person you sec in this room to-night is In this part of tho town at midday; they aro nil down town, while the patrons lunching hero between 11 and 2 o'clock have by tilts time reached their suburban homes. "The business in my plnco has grown perceptibly from week to week, and other proprietors' experience' has, I am told, been similar. In order to accom modate a few moro people I liavo sac rificed some of my olllco space." At tho Victoria Hotel dining rooms the story Is much the same, It being Impossible to scat nil thoso desiring tables between 0 and 7 o'clock. Tho congestion at the Waldorf -Asto ria, has been notorious for n long time, whllo tables are at a premium at the Holland Houso and elsewhere. Apromlucnt hotel man who was asked whether tho new hotels under construction nro likely to afford a measure of relief when completed gave It ns his opinion that the prospective restaurants would scarcely make them selves felt In any diminution of tho ex isting trade. "Thero Is enough for all, Including all tho new-comers," he said. You cuu't seem to build too many good hotels In this town." Now York Commercial. Duly on 1 in ported Cigars. "No, this war between the dealers of Imported cigars does not bother roc at all," said tho cigar store man, "for I do not think that I will over sell any, I do not want to keep them, wo get tobacco lu bulk that Is Just as 'A8TFIAL BELLS." good as any that comes hero mndo up, ' and wo can make better cigars from It than they do In Cuba. You may not instance" of Heorlnif the Hplrlt-Kunit know It, but tho customs law compels Chimes of In.lbi. tho payment of duty according to Tlio "astral bell" of India Is one of weight, nnd, naturally, tho manufac-- tho best known and most famous of turers who send their goods here must supposed occult or spiritual plienotn- make their clgnrs as light an.posslble. enn. It Is probable that It could nl- Tho result Is that tho cigars are not "'ays bo explained ns readily as In firm, and when you draw tho smoko tho following Instances, described by through the weed n draft Is caused Edmuud Itusscll In Everybody's Mngu- tlmt sets tho tobacco burning. Any zluc: smoker who loves good tobacco knows Tho most spiritual phenomena I wit that this destroys tho delicate flavor, boused wcro tho dally life of tho Isl and the smoke" thus obtained Is hot, dlnn people. The astral hell' I thought nursii, and dries tho tongue. I do not I heard twice, llio llrst time was In believe that I will over sell any lin- the beautiful guest house of the young ported clgnrs until thejr tako the duty Mahuruja of Hhavunngar, who Is fol off." New York Times.' i lowing Ids noble father lu every good deed. Vurloty In liuhiiury. I I was awakened ono morning by tho The first effort of tho now Depart- souud of n bell that In tho scent-laden meut of Commerce nud Labor Is to air seemed sweeter than any I had send un expert to Japan to study tho over heard. It Honied apparently Just culture of terrapin. This promlkcH n oulsldo my second-story veranda, for vnrletjf In Industry. When the labor I know there nro no locks nor bolls nor of did country Is fully engaged lu bells In an Indian houso. At night turnlug out diamond-back terrapin It servnnts sleep ncross Ihe portals of can forco capital lo behuvo Itself by every door, and throng tho entraiico threatening to shut off tho supply of i,y ,iiiy iWny ready to iinnwinco a that food product.-Plttshurg Dis. Valtor. It must bu run u grasping n little bell, which he was ringing furiously to nsk me to tnke n ride on him. Ills bendy eye twinkled with pleasure, and he censed when hu saw me, then made his salaam, kneel ing one knee nearly lit the ground, fol lowed by throwing up his trunk nud titiuipotlug. The second occult experience was when the deserted Hatheeslug l'nhico at Ahuiadabah was placed at my dis posal ns a residence. I lay one sultry afternoon, when Ihe punkas seemed only to sheil waves of furnace heat, listening to Ihe continuous loitilomlng nud tomiiHlialug uf the neighboring temple. The strnngo decorative repe tition that stupefies ihe mind brings the voluptuous, fatigue of the East, aud I was ready for marvels nud vi sions. There came Ihe sound of n most ex quisite silver bell, this time surely rung by n seraph. It filled the air liko Ihe farthest ohlnie from a distant sphere. At last! For a long time I could not locale It, then followed lo the great mnrhle au dience hall, lu a room next to which my mattress had been thrown. The furniture of crimson and gold was falling to pieces, Ihe draperies hung lu rags, ilust lay thick on the mosaic pavement. From the celling hung n forest of those crystal chande liers which ''are n passion In India. 'i he bell was Indeed rung by no hu man hands. A bright bird was dash ing In and out of the crystal pendants. ns If drunk with the melody It aroused. 'I his wns my second astral bell, and It had probably as good a foundation ns most of the legends which we hnvu heard. A OIQ LOT OF MONEY. lln Itelit uf I'ortr Millions Mar lie fnlil, Not the least Interesting phase of the I 'ana ma n canal settlement Is the problem of remitting the purchase money. Forty million dollars Is n substantial sum to draw In n brief space of time from n given money market. It Is truo that the treasury has a surplus fund which It reports nt ;--:i.Mx.ooo. nut or mis sum xi.vi,. HUO.tHH) Is on deposit with the banks, and therefore employed In the money market; wblle tlio balance of S7U,- 000.000 held In tho treasury's own vaults, exceeds hy only ) or -3 mil lions the sum which the government, habitually keeps for Its cash ex changes. If, therefore, tho purchase money were to ho paid to tho French owners of the property In cash, a heavy draft on bnnk reserves would bo necessary. Such largo International payments, however, nro not primarily mine in exported coin, but In sterling hills, by use of which tho recipient iraws on Loudon. An n rule such illls nro on three or six months' time. When, however, they mature they must bo mot by the American mar- ot. Payment may thou bo adjusted ti one of three wnys, by borrowing abroad again, renewing the bills us hey mature, by selling to Europo enough of merchandise or securities to offset Its claim, or by Bending gold. t is impossible to'sny, at the moment. which of tho threo expedients will In ho present Instance be ndopted. That Is a question largely dependent on the stuto of tho money market and ttho promise of this season's harvests. Tho question Is Interesting chlolly because of tho present strain on Now York's market, and the low figure nt which bank reserves stand. Now York Even lug Post. patch. rung by unseen bands. I went out on tlio veranda, nnd, of course, being In India, was not stir- 'Our Fish Aro Uucqualed Nothing In This Market Comes Near Them p,.,.- plo say that's 'cuuso they smell n ',rlst'11 ,0 tK0 "'itliuo bell held by a bad!"-Ilaltlmoro Herald. i great black serpent which had parted tho Jessamlno flowers. Perhaps It wns simply tho paluco cobru calling to breakfast. It was tho trunk of an elephant Is It possible for one woman to be too good-looking for other women to con sider her respectable? Tint llnlmir lu Alum. Few Germans have een tho Kaiser In plain clothes. Yet he docs wear them sometimes, hut only when It Is hsolutely necessary, for ho prefers uniform, even at home. The tluio ho Is In mufti In Herlln Is when he goes to his tenuis court. Ho then wears a whlto llauuel suit, but out of doors covers It with n military loan. When ho Is In England, however, mufti Is the rule. This Is also tho only tluio that anybody has ever aeeitr the Kaiser In a dinner Jacket or a black dross coat. Formerly tho Knlser ordered all tils plain clothes from England, browna and light grays being his favurlto col ors; hut now ho orders everything lu Herlln nud Potsdam, mostly In the lat ter plnco. London Dally Express. A Gooil Thing. "I hear you're trying to Invent a now stylo of cornet." "Yes; I'm ut work on one with a ro flex action. "What's the fden?" "If 1 can get It working right It will blow tho bond off anybody who tries lo use It." Philadelphia J'ross. If a grumbler lives nt a boarding house, the ndvlco Is, "Well, why d6n't you chaugo?" If tho grumbler lives at home, he Is always told that be will have to stand !, r R3