more salneo un 'e hnd before he weut! WiCSiLY'S WOODS) By II. W. TAYLOR V JK ur pap ull git tuck k'yur uv, Llsiy. Ms uu Joe ICIIct un Bill Shipley ull go over to-morry ur day alter, un see to 'Int. That was that ornerry hee-lmwun uu whim whatmmin feller, Mason, at druv n past Jlst now, hoys! I h-yurn 'at ho' h-yur to bid I "II ar moggljls. I've jlst soul Mm par er nodus at he'll he hiust up ef he pit a his nose cn-dilo a this town tho next thee-four weeks, by guml" THEWEEKLY i HISTORY fflljIliTOjfiPw i CHAPTER VIII. Continued.) Hilly Bllcr looked Tory much relieved at something. Probably at tho prospect of trouble. Or perhaps that tliero waa no public elm res that any of Squire Wlckly'e money hud gone Into his pocket. At the Miuo moment Liny Wlckly wm saying; "I don't mind It, father. And you mustn't. Wo can't mitko It any bettor by worrying o over It. And so fnr ns tii bind li concerned" but she could not go on without it sort of spasm of tho throat thnt itrnnclcd her for teti sec onds "why, It Isn't such a beautiful tract a all that Next tlmo I'll buy n quarter section In the accoud bottom prairie. That will b a sensible pur chase, won't It?" Mr. Wlckly looked nt her with hU brows knitted Into tho sort of lowering fiown that had until to-dny been un known ujwn his kindly face. "You don't seen to understand," he void, harshly and slowly, nud with that strange flushing of tho whole face that had made Dr. May shako his head, when lis had been called In to see the sick man thnt morning "that I already know that the mere loss of thoie ugly wooded bills nnd hollow is nothing! Hut is It nothing that 1 must lose my fortune of more than a mfltton three hundred thou sand, simply because I can hare noth ing upon which to raise n few hundred dollars when It is needed to push ray case I believe that you actually want mo to fall, or delay It until I die. so that you can have It. Yes, that's It. That's the plot that yon are capable of concocting and carrying forwardl You and that scoundrel, Mason I Ho put you up to it! That's what you were In the woods that day for!" lie came toward her with his hands clenched nnd his lips drawn In a sort of horrible smile that changed and vi brated between the appearance of ghastly mirth and fierce anger. She had never dreamt of such a mood In him. For he had been the best and kindest of fath ers never very helpful at bread-win-nine, to be sure! But so uniformly good aud kind, and sensible! And now In this awful mood he surely meant to do her karral At that Instant Mrs. Wlckly coming lo, fortunately announced In her ordinary cheerful manner that "dinner was ready, and go on In John; don't keep me wait ing!" Aa If instinctively, or by force of long habit, John Wlckly turned slowly away, and with the menacing look fading Into a sullen and brooding frown, he went lowly ont of the room and into the kitchen, where they heard him moving a 1 cialr as be always did In sitting down to dinner. cnArTKit ix. "Now. Liny, my child," said the moth er in a hurried undertone, "put on your sunbonnct and run as quick as you can ran to Dr. May's and tell him that I want him to como, and bring some help. If he thinks best Itun uow!" "But hadn't you better go with me 7 la It safe for you alone r The girl clasped her arms convulsive ly about her mother a neck. "It will be perfectly safe for me. Liny. Itun, now." The girl started, and btr mother ran after her to the door. "When you come back, don't come In where be is, Lizzy. You know what strange antipathies are often shown by by by people under great mental excite ment" She had hesitated at the very word that was ringing louder and louder through all the resounding labyrinth of the brain. She had made a generaliza tion where the specific object was most glaringly before them, Lizzy thought, as she ran through the dry, light, yield log sand of the street If she had said plainly what she so plainly meant ahe would haTe said: "Don't venture near him! lie Is furi ously insane, and Is possessed of the hallucination that you and Mr. Mason an plotting to injure and thwart and de stroy hi in. lie may kill you in a sudden paroxysm of insane fury. Don't go near him I Don't go near him!" Unheeding the knots and larger bunches of men that now literally dot ted all the conjoined thoroughfares of Sandtown, scarcely stepping a foot out of the way of the wagon leads of people that were still coming In from tho south west by the Hirer road and from the northeast by the Overcoat road, Lizzy ran on to the doctor's office, only to dis cover that be was not there. "He's done gone down town some'rs, long go. Reckon' you'll fine 'im raehby ome'rs whur they're agoun to hole the meetun on the bank bustun. I'll go down un scef I kin ketch 'im fur yub, ef you yawnt me to," said young Billy Dikes, who was known to be "reading medicine and tendun to Doc's houses fur 'Im." ay his father, little Bill Dikes, had said Jo cosely In explanation of the process by which young Billy had already achieved the title of "the youug Doe" upon the upontaneous motion of the humorous Hoo.ilers of his acquaintance. Tho young Doc had clearly volunteered to "ketch 'im," as an afterthought found ed upon the signs of great anxiety and distress In the young woman's face signs of need of help that bad appealed successfully to the chivalric hearts of these rough people of Sandtown ever, heretofore, and will continue so to appeal successfully, bo long as one of their characteristics shall remain unplaned sway by the smoothing and polishing pro cesses of advancing civilization. "You Jlst set right down right b-yur, In this h-yur chur," contlnuod the kindly youug Iloosler, exhibiting all the hos pitable Instincts of all the hospitable Dlkescs, as far back as anybody can re member. "Is your pap much worse, Waxy 7" All Ilooslerdom has a fashion despis ed of the pollshod Bast as it Id of call ing everybody by his or her christened tiAinot A fashion that It Is to be hoped will not be planed away In the polishing processes of westward-advancing civiliza tion. "I'm afraid he'a itrj much worse in fUed," Lizzy Mid, taking the offered chair, and feeling that even this rmlo sympathy lightened the burden of her great grief. Site had dreaded to reveal It to the world. But oho found that the world of Sandtown knew It already, and took actlvo and partisan Interest lit do ing what It could to help her. "I h-yurn um say at this h-yur feller, Mason Is jlst about the whole cause uv yur pap's uhuh sickness 7" "tho young Doc" said, as he put ou his hat nud lin gered a little. "I don't know. I can't think so. 1 don't know what Mr. Mason has realty done In all this terrible business. Will you please hurry. Mr. I)lkes7 I left mother alone with htm. And I'm uneasy, so uneasy," She sat down again aa the young Doc sprang out of the open oRlce door and ran down the street throwing up little arcs of dry, sandy loam nfter each broad, scraping shoe-sole until he disappeared In the crowds that still closer and closer drew to each other and grew and blocked up all Die thoroughfare of Sandtowu till not oveu a re-euforclng team from the very uttermost end of the Overcoat road dared attempt a parage, but stopped and hitched farther and farther out. She sat nnd listened to the low buis of voiced In the streets nnd in tho court home, and heard here nnd there louder tones, and occasionally a wild yell ami then a shout of laughter that Indicated soma ludicrous accident to somebody by somebody else. Then all at once there was a complete diminuendo as If all tho voices had sud denly and steadily slipped away to the westward, and out of hearing. And then she saw a two-horse wagon drive away from her father's door, with a number of people In it. She had not seen the wagon drive up. She had not been look ing that way. But there was something ominous in the driving away of that par ticular wagon, that was now far out on the Overcoat road, tqward the littlo rail road station. She watched it with parted lips and widening eyes until It had hid den Itsolf In the clouds of drifting, light sandy loam that perpetually rose up and settled down upon the grayed surface of all tho jimson leaves and the oak and tho maple and walnut foliage, that bore their burdens of earth In patient assur ance of the rain that must come and wash them dean and bright again. And then out of the hush, the finished diminuendo of this general assembly of the makers of public opinion for this sec tion of the Wabash country, there drov a strange and unknown two-horse car riage, with a driver, whose figure com ing within the.field of her abstracted aud unfixed vision Instantly caught and con centrated her gaze. Beyond a doubt It was Mr. Mason, this time In broad day light driving toward her through the crowd, and going eastward as to the rall-1 way station, lie would stop when he shonld see her! And there were others In the carriage one a fine, dignified look ing gentleman. Was he Mr. Huntley J She stood In the door and even stepped down Into the sand outsldo In onler to make sure that Mr. Mason would see her. lie had doubtless repented of his determination to keep Prof. Huntley away from her; and now he would make CHAPTER X. The rain hnd put off Its coming until every broad black-green glossy Jlmsoii leaf, and all tho delicately tialmated foil- age of tho wild hemp, and the maple, nud tho white oak had long lain under the common veil of sober gray, thrown everything over by the rolling wheels and tramping feet of the Overcoat road In the light, sandy loam came down at last In a steady, growing patter that awoke Llzsy Wlckly for the twentieth time throughout the hot, feverish, restless night. For the twentieth time she lsv and listened to the southwest wind, sweeping lu gusty circles thnt dashed the cool, hard rain against tho window panes with a shot-like rattle as If It were the dimin utive pebbles of that threatening, specter-trodden, ominous Overcoat road, ris ing up and flying at her In a coujulnod onslaught of all possible evils. How she tried to recnll tho almost perfect happiness that hnd beeu her only a lew neeus agol And how did she only "It was aa easy its fulling off a log," mill tho young num wltih tliu now shoulder straps. "But I thought you luul to go through West IVilnt." "You do, If there Isn't nuy other way. If you've got n long pull nud n strong pull you ran tnlto n short cut. I took the o.inmtuatloua, though. 1 crnmititM for them. The chap who did the cramming s.ild thnt I was n partic ularly good subject for the operation. 1 illtlii't have anything to unlearn. He Intimated that my mind was simply one. largo yawning cavity -a void without so much as nn nolle In It ami all he hnd to do was to shovel In Information of the kind there -would be a call for on the paper. Ho was fairly wise to that,, nil right. "All tho Mine, It was a good thing for mo Hint pupa was In tho Senate. I'm lucky, all right. But I was luck- succeed In fully understanding that she I lint when It catno to the physical e.v his ungraciousness. If so she could very, very freely, nay even Joyously forgive him. Aud that much the more readily because of the fact that since so many people. In fact, practically the whole community, had Joined as with one voice in denouncing and threatening Mr. Mason, she had turn ed alxiut and engaged, passively at first aud then actively, in his defense. What had he done to any and all of the people of Sandtown that was half so unfair, imj'lt and cruel as what be had done to ber7 Compered with her wrengs, theirs were n matter of nothing! If she could afford to become his com panion, could anybody In all Itedden township afford to say aught against him? As they drove rapidly nearer, she, was conscious of something altered about his look, she could nut tell precisely what. But it was something that gave him a totally different air, some way! Before, he hnd beeu thoughtful, respectful, al most subservient in all his action In her presence. Always watchful, respectful, and con siderate, at ail events, with a manifest anxiety to please her. An anxiety so manifest tMt perhaps It had tended to prevent her from being pleased with him at all. Now he had something of tho cold, hard, haughty look of the man who I directing a great many men who arc "under" him In every sen of the word. She saw this so plainly In that brief time in which the powerful horses were walking through the heavy-pulling dry sand of the Overcoat read, that she com pared this with his former Iwariug aud fell that there w as a low almost an un comfortable loef. And all those Impressions and reflec tions nr redoubled and reduplicated, ami intensified, when to her utter surprise and unending mortification the carriage did not stop, awl the driver, Mr. Mason, passed with only a cold and formal In clination of his head toward her! She fairly sunk down upon the ofilcr door sill with a feeling of shame, sur prise, almost angry resentment! She looked after the carriage as the new paint on its wheel glittered in tho sun. She saw them whirl the light sand up into little settling clouds, and she felt absolutely like screaming at the very ton of her voice and starting in a wild chase after tho rapidly disappearing vehicle. So engrossed was alio with these feel ings and reflections that she waa un aware of the approach of Dr. May along with "Coourod" Redden, and a constant ly Increasing posse of followers. "Lizzy, you un your mother better git into vaj calrge, nn Lum will drive you down to my house. lilts no use ub mekun a furso 'bout things 'at caln't be hept Yur pap's Jlst plum, slap dab crazy, Un we've jlst started 'im to tha asalo-um. That aaslo-um Is jlst tho plast fur 'im. IIo'U git k'yored right uway cf they' airy- a k'yore fur 'im. They sont Billy Beaseley over to that asalo-um bout thee-four weeks ago, wasn't It Doc 7 Un by gum; he's back at homa now with had then been really happy and hnd not known It. The angel of bliss had tar ried with her for nights and days, and she, too, culpably unaware! Her brain pictures enmo and went It, one unvarying triangle of great troubles. Her father's dreadful mental disease, with all the divergent ami dependent misery of this more than living death, blighting aud destroying their happy lit tlo homo nt one terrible blow. Her strong and growing passion for n man whom she had never seen face to face. and whom she only know through tho partial word pictures of his friend and assistant; together with the attitude of tliat friend and assistant toward her. And finally, as the smallest angle of this triangle of constantly pressing griefs the loss of her property upon which sha had built her hopes of future suc cesses to be achieved In the great city that was so fsst spreading down and across the prairies, that Its subtle at traction had long ago reached the wooded hills of tho Wsbash country, and wns drawing to Itself alt of the ambition, the daring, the discontent, the spirit of ad venture of these wide valleys and shaded hills, and wood-hedged prairies. Cutting Into the secoud angle of this triangle, and even Into both the others was a perplexing mixture of regret and Indignation centered upon Mr. Mason. Ilegret that she had been left, so far as he kuaw or could know, In the attitude of having treated him with Inexcusable rudeness aud lack of feeling. What did he think of her; what could be think of her In the light of that last evening when be bad appeared for a brief time endowed with god-like attributes that enabled him to defy the vary demon of the hurricane? What a magnificent msn must his prin cipal be, Indeed, to have developed such heroic qualities In this underling the man who labored with him for a stlnu- la ted price, as he hsd confessed to her! How had he slipped awny like a thief nuder cover of the night with all the gossips of Sandtown wagging their heads and smiling the knowing smile of absolute faith In the certain villainy of the flee ing man! Why had he not taken time to come to her openly and without fear, amlnntlou. It Imdu't occurred to the folks that my path would Iwve to be smoothed lu thnt dlnvtlon. and I was cocknuru myself tliat I was all husky In thnt respect. I never did pride my elf on my Intellect, birt when It come to chest owiiln I don't take u iwck seat fur ntijUvly. "dust s soon ns I laid eyes on the aawbone. I was ordered to rr'strt to I figured that If he Imd n chance to turn tne down he'd do It. lie was an old duck probably hniln't had a promo tion slnco ho wont Into the service nud iinttirnlly felt erc to sec a bright young man shluiriim over the alley femv liiMctut f wnlkliu; around to the front gate. 1 saluted In my best style, but It didn't seoiu hi prvpltWitc hUn worth a. tvit. " .Strip,' he barked. "'You meftti that you wish mo to disrobe? 1 lii)iilrtvl. "'I mean atrip,' he says. "Well, I didn't cart? to nrgiie with lilin on the felicity of Uic I'Miresslon. I peeled light there. Then ho went lo work on me. He punched me In the rlli and then hauled off iiml lauded on my chest. Ho wrenched lity .'awn npnrt and looked at every tooth I own cd. lie made mo bond forward nud backward nud do various feat of ground tumbling, He tried my car with the tick of n wnteh nml my eye sight with a basket of Berlin wool skclus. Then he got out a rdotho ncox and prospected for pulmonary symptom--unsuccessfully. "Ho looked more nivd mom disap pointed every minute of tho time un til ho work ixl hi way down my rluht leg. Then his face htiirhlcncd. 'I Id lo!' he nay. This le;; Ipia been broken.' " 'That doesn't cut any lee.' 1 snld. 'I can kick n hard ns ever I could.' '"You must lot me be the Judgo of that, yoilliK limn,' lie said gniltly, 'The tmuo ha knit, but It 1ms been set Iwd ly, nml I doubt whether tho limb would be eUal to the strwln of n twenty live mile forced uiHivh.' "or ploet) of work, eh 7 I wild "'A IniU'Ii,' he replied, plemssntly. 'I'm afraid that I thall ih1 be able to psM you lu till examination.' " 'lather alwn.VM nald It was a botch,' 1 told Win. 'but I inner expect cd to liHMryou own up to It. It's ymr ou u Job, doctor. Do you roiiHMtiher a kid fulling off the roof of (he Hit trader" shed when you wore slMthHicd nt Blley7 That was me. I'ntlior Iwd tho Imy contract at that time. You didn't examine tlml old fracture nuy too carefully. Feel It again ami hv If It Isn't III better shape than you thought, won't you, ph-aw, doctor? "So he felt It ngnln. "'I don't know but thnt leg's sou ml enough for nil prnctlcnl purpoM-,' ho mild. 'It was nn ugly fracture, though, and mot Mirgrous would hIiii ply have amputated ami let It gu nt tlmf "Chicago Dnlly News. MAVWS nil nnwiurr n.t nnultila .mpnrl, fnr nil I as he had done often and often before? .inn coinii ii or irue ns more man In timated by Conrad Beddcn, that he was now In the neighborhood for the base nnd heartless purpose of purchasing all the heavily mortgaged property of the Sandtown people for one-tenth of Its real value. Just at the time when a series of unfortunate speculations had crushed the Snndtown Fanners' Bank, and thus put It out of the power of the people to bor row money with which to save their homes? (To b continued.) WORLD'S RICHEST MEN. List Shows Where the Millions Are Distributed Here und Abroad. No two uompotttont have made sim ilar IUU of the millionaire of tiio world. Ohlnn, ICnglnnd, Trance, Bus Hla ami the United .States each clulm to be tho home of tho richest man. The Hat compiled by Jnine.i Burnley, tlio English author, is as followa: Al fred Belt diamonds, Loudon, $,'),. (XjO.OOO; J. It. Itoblnson, koI.1 and dtu niondx, Iudoii, f 100,000,000; J. D. Kockefoller, oil, New York, J2W),000, 000; W. W. Aator, land, London, JliuO, 000.000; I'rlncH Denildoff, land, St. I'oternbtirK, J200.000.000; Androw Carnegie, steel, New York, $ri5,000, 000; W. IC. Vanderbllt, railroads, Now York, 5100,000,000; Wlllln.ni Bockofel lor, oil, Nojv York, $100,000,000; J. J. Astor, land, Now York, ?75,000,000; Lord BoUiHchlld, money landing, Lon don, $"r,000,000; Duko of WoKtmln Hler, land, London, $75,000,000; J. I'lorpout Morgan, Imuklng, Now York, ?7.',000,000; I.ord Iveagh, beer, Dub lin, $70,000,000; .Swtora Isldon Cou nine, nilnea und railroads, Culler, $70, 000,000; M. Heine, Hllk, 1'nrin, $70, 000,000; Huron Alplioiiso Uotiischlld, money lending, i'arls, $70,000,000; Baron Nathaniel BotliHclilld, money liuidlng, Vienna, $70,000,000; Arch duko Frederick of Aimtrlu, land, Vien na, $70,000,000; (ieorne J. Gould, rail roudu, Now York,. $70,000,000; Mrs. Hetty Green, bunkliig, New York, $!5.V 000,00); Jnmwj II. Smith, banking, Now York, $fiO,000,000; Duko of Do? onHhlre, land, London, $50,000,000; Duko of Bedford, land, London, $50, 000,000; Henry O. Hnvemeyor, sugar, New York, $50,000,000; John Smith, mines, Mexico. $45,000,000; Claus Spreckels, sugar, San Francisco, $-10,-000,000; Archbishop Conn, land, Vien na, $40,000,000; Itussell Sage, money lending, Now York, $25,000,000; Sir Thomas Upton, groceries, London, $25,000,OOO.r-KnnM8 City Journal. Our grand business Is, not to see what Ilea dimly at a dlstanco, but to do what clearly Ilea at hanL Corlyla. Two-third of the malo population of tho world. It Ls estimated, wxs to bacco. The children of the United States each year consume toy that cost nt retail SI.'.OOO.OOO. Within the last fifty years, Hamburg and the coast of Germnuy In It neigh borhood Im sunk live feut nine Inches. A atone lions-1 I not so durable ns one of brick. A brick house well con structed will outlast ono built of gran ite. The population of Bangkok I esti mated nt 500.000 wnils. among wUniu arc about 000 Kuropouus and Ameri ca ns. The IVipuan native village constable, with ten shillings n jear ami two uni forms, ta tho cheapest iollcvman Aus tralia lina to jmy. Sweden ami Norway aits tho only countries whore praetkaHy crwy grown ma,n can read and write. Ba varia cowo-t next hi Ula rwfpect A curlou plant Has rewtly Imh-h found In Mexico. It Is slmlkr to a pumpkin, wltli a rough, corky lark, re sembling that of nn oak. It haa been named "pahim." Uncle Sam U dealing with two kinds of IndlaiM In the Indian Territory Um real Indian, uukitown In the liant. and the picture Indian, unknown to th Wct. St. loul Gtolxt-Democrat. Tho Austrian ICmijwor la a man of the atniplesit taste, but atlll he I said to Meml $'iT0,000 a year on the palace tables). The dally cot of ftirnlahlug the Imperial table U from $'.'00 to $W). Tho Kaiser haa Just been npolotcd sh a captain general In Uie Spanish .riny. There ruimilnti now no ISuro hui force, military or naval. In which he doot not hold honorary rank. He KjteHM4-H ut leant 150 uniform. The SlamoHe capital la the terminus of four llnoti of railway. It bus a Hue ftorvico of electric trains nml la well lit by electrlolty. It nlso joemon one of tluj lliumt race couraoM lu the Kant and haa nwiiy eliilw, tine hotels, Mev eral banks, good hoapltnl, etc. The xedUon of women la high In Slam; they enjoy Iwtli In ImalitoMi matter ami social life it great lude peiMlHiicc Though ixilygnuiy 1 per mitted, It dooa net exkst among the groat iimm of people, and In no way affecta the poattlou of women. It waa a New York house that print ed the IkiikU for the recent JnpHiieae loan. Tho Loudon baukH Unit lasued the boiula uro wild (o have discovered n curious error In them. A number of the '-"00 Ixinls liuvo different iimouutM In tho wittonimrk and lu the text. No foreign iwvo reign known the Hug llsli language better than tho King of Italy, who, when a small lmy, wna made to speak It In placo of Ida na tive tongue. Aa n youngater King Vic tor ISmmanuol III, kept n diary, In which ho recorded the events of his life in Bngllsn. Taking a leaf out of tho book of Mary Queen of Scots, tho ISmprojw Dowager of China, It ls a:4d, Is going to have her handmaids In the ihiIhuo taught to now and spin. In lieu of tue tambour framo they will bo nupplled with looms and learn tho useful art of weaving towels nml other domestic llnon. In Uie fashionable West ICnd of Iondou a teacup especially made for fortune telling U being sold. The cup la riigrnicd on the itwttde with the mystic symlwla of tiio fortune teller a It'll, heart. )orcnhoc. aiul mi nn. The ton leaved at the bottom are swirl-1'"1? Yeara Ago. One) Hundred Ycnrrt Ago. Sweden was ulillKvd by the ti'Iiioiv (trance of Prussia lo decline the prof fered subsidy of Kughlnd. The city of l.nbeck. lernmny, wn surrounded by French troops lo pre eiit Huglbdi pntducta fmiu being lu trodiieed, IHghtii'n American vessels were at the port of AiiiHtetdHiu. The French wnveruiuent pnnaeil a law grunting pension to alt emigrant from Santo iMiulnjei). Three thousand French triMips were onlensl to The Hague o prvienl an uprising which was daily expected Itc-cuforcetiieut of Frem-h trixip ar rived at Snuto Domingo and elTeclunl- ly repulsisl Uuinir Destinies' army. I'ortugal purt'liHMNl wllli the cuiiriir rence of I'hglaiiil the suff ranee of Fmucu to remain neutral In (he war. Scvcnty-flvo Years Ago. V lieu til ll dei'lnntt Itself Independent. l'nstlirllig of ciwm ou the Boutou common wa forbidden by law Sioux IiKllnni annihilated the Hnt and Fox trlttes near Dubiiipie, town The first light or the lllncknx-k tight house nt I.lverjMxil nppeanxl 0)iigres provhliMl for a iMiundnry linn to I hi run N-imc-ii ,oulslim ami Arkansas territories. I'otntleum was discovert! In Ken tucky, ami a It was siipjmhmsI lo have healing properties It waa Ixtlllod and sold throughout the t 'lilta-sl Stale and Kuropo for medicine The first gohl from Georgia mhiev wa recsdved at the United Mates mint ed round the cup. ami according to the oaltion or obJcti on which Uiey stick ao is one" fortune. All kind of dny hnve bern cele brated nt rxooaltlons nnd fairs, but for originality of Idea the promoters of n fair at Mncon, On., hnve the rt of tho country put to sleep. Tills fair Is to hnve a "Smith day," nml all the Smiths of Georgia are Invited to at tend. There are two Smith nt thn head of th show and there are -100 other Smltha In Macon, it Is comput ed tlait Georgia contains .in.Ooo Smiths, more or le. Including Uoku Smith of Atlanta. Mobile lleglstor. It la a curloiM fact that a loyV i.. i. ..... i i .... uu ,'' wm-iHiii siower iiinu a girl's. In loya the averagt rate of growth Is threo feet thret Inchea In six ytr. Iehig an average of .01 h Inch a day. During Uie twenty-first and twenty-fourth year a man' hair growi (iiU-ker than at any oilier pe rlsxl. It take an cytlatt4i twenty weeka to n-ach a length of .VJU imIi, aial tliett It life Is from l(i to J no day. By iifHan f H i,WM,ra. the wink of an ayeHd haa befii measured, ami It wa fouml that twenty wink can be MMMle In four whiiwIh. Uitcoim'louHly, HHHtt ICugtish men ami wtrttien Iwve Ihimi thinking in mill ions ever since the American ami min ing millionaire Imve come in the front ami that is one" of Uw main cause of Uie illtrtreH which exist tltroiighoni the country, in the Vit Kml mmt tnen of moderate mean hate Imhi liv ing as If a vast fortune waa awaiting tlimn In the ImuuslkHle fulure, their wives and daughters have drotcd ism aldurnbly latyond their nllowiince; and In'the city the average business man will not coiishler a propiaal thnt f. fonls no prospect of proiit on a lame Hoalc Imdon Graplilc. Tlio New Alnltl. Th greenness of the newly arrivtsl H-rvant girl Is froahly IHustrHttsl. , certain maid who hail Just come over .from Ireland was engaged by a Brook lyn liollHiikeHr. A bell hung lu the girl's room, and the morning nfler ur arrival her mistress rang I hla bell to get her up. But the miild did im get up, though the bell rung ami rang. Finally, therefore, the mUtrisss roo herself, nud slipping on a dressing gown a!. lmsteneil to the new er van'ta room. There, wide awake, the maid lay, laughing tit tho top of lmr lungs. ' "What on earth are you laughing at, Norahi" said the mistress. "Faith, mum," Norah answered. "I'm Inughln' nt that boll. As sure as I live I Imvon't touched It, an' -Just soo It's wnggln' yet." IKn t'nrlis. the Spanish pretender, illrsl at Trb-st. The Nlagnrn suspension bridge was completed. A free) public school system was es tablished In Illinois. Tho Atlantic nud St. Lnwreure rail- , mad waa leased to the Grand Trunk railroad Mr WW year. Nassau hall nt 1'rlnccton university, built In I7.VI, wns dmiroycd by lire. Several persons were killed by tho falling In of the floor of the town hull at Meredith. N. II. The pIculiMitcntlarle at Vienna ex changed power ami commenced pro ceisllng townnl agreeing iiMin the terms of l(Uo-Tllrklli pisirn. Unite Nnturul. Mlfkln Did that policeman you spoke of die u nntiirnl dith? BlfkJns Yoa; ho just wont from ono sloop Into nnother until ho fell Into his Inst steep. It Is evory child's demand thnt n parent should provide him with every luxury AND savo money. Happy la tho man who ls too busy to find fault ' forty Years Ago. The panic In irld carried quotation down to lfVi. a drop of iyt oliil In three days. The Parliament at Onebeo adopted the confederation m-Iwws by a large tote. Itejtorts ef Mhsrldatt aud Sherman aUi'cenam nmtl gbl down to IMI' A stnrt time before It Wits quoted at '.". aal over. News reached the North thnt th (ilifelernfe Congees hsil pssxil a bill to arm and wpilp the n.-.-rues as Hihllers. Itlchutoiet (Va i aiers publuhed an exiswiure of an alleged eom.plrii.-y to oust Dnvl and Stephen, make lluntrr lireskleut, nml end the war ('resident Unmdii Isaunl a proclama tion onlering tliat nil cltlscu or doml died ngmits trnllleklng with riife.l erutea be arrested and hold ns prison ers of war. Thirty Yearn Ana. The Hawaiian treaty was helm fought lu tlio Senate by sugar Inter ests, At a consistory hold nt the Vatican Archbishop MeC'loskey of New York was made n cardinal. The French Assembly passed tha military reorganisation bill, (ho i-ousll tutkiu hating litHui adopted several Weeks previously. A tornado devastated the town of llleiul, Miss. The river bottoms In the Northwest States were lloodisl. Quite a sensation was caused lu r.iiglund by the outcnum of the Mur daiint dlvorco uasn In which Iwuly Mor daunt was decreed guilty, Twenty Years Ago, The militia was mobilized nt Sedalla and oUier points In Missouri lo sup pruss rlola Incident to tho railroad strike on tho Gould systom. Indon papers admitted that tho re lations between Knglnnd and llussla wro strained almost to tin. im.niin.r point over the hitter's Afghan frontier aggression. President Cleveland Issued a procla. matlon barring the "boomer- from, Okluhomu. Ton thousand Of tho 1U.000 cnnl .nln. ers lu tho Pittsburg district struck for hlghor wages. Tlio poww ngrcAxl to n conforonw to bo held In Paris to doternituo tha status of tho Hue, canal. 1 i i? JiM-.Ws