' 4. ". Harvals of ItruMel , The finest of all lace is Brnssels. Bel gium is the lacemakors' chosen home. One-fortieth of the whole population Is engaged in it. The government tnpporta 900 lace schools, to which children are sent as young ae five years. By the time thoy ure ten they are self mpporting. Brussels is a pillow lace, Indeed, Barbara Littman, the inventor If pillow lace, lived and died there. The pattern, drawn upon parchment, ia fixed hrmly to the pillow, pins are stnek tdong the outlines, and to them the lace In woven by crossing and twisting the threads, each of which ends in a bobbin. Lace two inches wide requires 800 or 100 bobbins. A piece six inches has tometimes as many as a thousand. The thread is hand spnn from the best Bra bant Sax, in damp, dark cellars, whose one ray of light falls on the spinner's band. Naturally spinning is very unhealthy, and experts get high wages. The best yarn from a single pound of flax fetches over $3,000. For filling flowers and leaves fine soft cotton is used. Grounds, too, are often made of it. Elaborate patterns are made in sections, and joined together by the most skillful workers of all As the lace ib never washed before it is sold, the most exquisite neatness is requisite in everything connected with it Still, as months are consumed in mak ing very handsome pieces, the work turns dingy in spite of the lace worker's best efforts. To remedy that it is some times dusted with white lead in powder, ami turns dark at contact with gas or sulphur in a way to exasperate the wearer. New York Herald. Why the Mafia Exists In Italy. The origin of the Camorra and Mafia murder leagues ceases to puzzle travel ers who have visited the rural districts of southern Sicily. Nearly all the real estate of the coast plain from Syracuse to Cape Bianco is in the hands of a few aristocrats, who have deprived their ten ants of their panes as well as of their cireenses, of the right to hunt, to fish, to tram fighting cocks, without a special license, as well as of the more urgent necessities of life. The streets of the in land villages generally resemble the gul lies of a parched out mountain river, and the houses are mere mud piles, roofed with flat stones and wattles of broom corn, and surrounded by rubbish heaps, where mangy curs and sore eyed chil dren compete for scraps of animal re fuse. laborers, returning from a day's hard work, sit down to a meal of maize paste and salad, washed down with the water of the slimy village cistern. The profits of bttle truck farms barely satisfy the demunds of the tithe collector, and in dignation meetings are promptly sup pressed, but midnight conventicles are less easy to prevent, and the starving villager would as soon defile the statue of Garibaldi as to betray a Capo Mafioso who has befriended him at the expense of an oppressive landlord. Felix L. Os wald in Philadelphia Times. A Mew tJa for Matches. I watched a train hand stagger through the coach with eyes closed and a tearful face a case of cinder. He met a com panion, who instantly felt in his vest pocket, poised himself, made one motion, and the suffering brakeman at once went back to his post relieved. "How did you remove that cinder?" I asked. "With a match," he replied. Producing one, he split it to a point with his thumb nail. "This look i like a harsh way to treat so tender an organ," said he, "but it is en tirely safe. Turning back the eyelid, the speck only needs to be touched by some dry substance in this case the match to adhere to it We have to help one another so a dozen times a day." 'But why not wait until stopping?" I inquired. "Too busy then. Besides, there is no need. It was easy on a train in motion as on the ground when one is accustomed to it. After raising the arm for the operation, one needs to get the swing of the train. This car runs smoothly, bo I did quick work." Spring field Homestead. ' Parisian Bouquets. Please to heed what an autocrat direct from the salons of Paris has to say on the subject of bouquets. No more "com posed bunches of flowers" are carried by the fashionable women in that dizzy capital. A beribboned bouquet is re garded as "bad form," only the Parisian has another phrase for bad form, and a dame of the haut monde now enters a salon carrying a spray or branch of some flowers in season, such as lilac or miiuoea. In this land of extravagance, where all the flowers are always in bloom, she might hold a spray of orchids orabnnch of roses, but the arranged bouquet, jamais! The idea is to resem ble the young martyrs in the pictures, theBe said martyrs generally holding in one hand a palm branch. Perhaps our florals will catch on to this new wrinkle asd have some extraordinarily lovely blooms prepared for their fair customers. Boston Herald. Cheap Transportation. DnmpBoj--Hello, BlobsonI Going over tc Winixiski this morning) Blotam-Yes, I've an errand that will carry nte there. Bmnpsey-You'ree lucky dogl I've gotta go aloot Burlington Free Pre, Be beaerred Her. ''Why, Mr. Banks, since when have yon wen wearing eyeglaasesF'- ' W nil, 51 w rjhth, the truth It yon always trnmsA so distant to me that I thought glasset inisui Drug you a lutio nearer." New York IWHlli. STORIES ABOUT MEN. Bow Andrew Carnegie ltuttled Off Bll Own Aleuugi!. A short man, with gmy heard neatly trimmed and clear eyes that look directly at you as if they were exiuniuiug tho insid of your head, stepped briskly up to the iron t railing nrouml the government telegraph tuhle in the house corridor the other day and asked if he could semi a message. The op-. erutor politely told him that general business was handled at the Western Union up stairs, next to the press gallery. "But this is to the ' secretary of war," suggested the would becus- ; toraer. "Very well, then, 1 will send it as soon as I finish this message," said tho op erator. "If you are busy I can send it my self," continued the man with the brisk step and the bright eyes, "if it isnt against tho rules to let me inside the railing. I ant an old telegraph operator myself; I believe I was one of the first that ever took messages by sound." The operator thought be hod better work the key himself, hut ho glanced at the signature of tho dispatch to see who his pleasuut spoken customer was. j The name was "Andrew Carnegie," and he was allowed to send his own dispatch. nasniugton Letter In r biladelphia frees. Ben Butler and the Page. One of tho pages in the house of repre sentatives had a faculty for drawing, ilia sketches of the members were fairly good caricatures. The easiest mark for his pencil was the statesman from Massachusetts, and the caricatures of Ben began to float around the house pretty promiscuously. Thematter coming to the attention of Mr. Butler, com plaint was made to the dnorkeepor, who bad charge of the pages. The offending boy was kept after adjuuromeut to be reprimanded. He was taken before the statesman, who had waited to hold court on the little criminal. "Bo you are the boy that has been making these pictures?" "Yes.sir." "Hum! How old are jaat "Twelve, sir." "Well, go to the cloak room and tret tnv hat." , The boy scampered off on tho errand, glad even for the momentary respite, but evolv- 1 tog in his mind the possible character of the : impending punishment, which was such Hint , the judge needed his hat before going to the place of execution. When tho youngster had returned and tremblingly yielded up the tile, w gmrciu, niw uus au enurmous oeou, threw the hat like a candle snuffer down over the tow head and naming face of the boy. It covered him like a second mortgage. "My sou," said the hero of New Orleans, "when you can fill that hot you may carica ture Benjamin F. Butler. Now go." Chi cago Herald. Eighteen Months Was Nothing. Judge Gary has probably made more witty and quaint remarks on the bench than any other judge in Chicago. On one occasion, when he was sitting in the criminal court, he appointed a young attorney to defend a young criminal who was brought to trial and who bad no lawyer. The young man had just been admitted to the bar and was consequently ambitious to make a reputation, but despite his utmost endeavors his client was "sent up" for eighteen months. After court adjourned the yonng man walked over town with the judge and took occasion to say: "That was pretty bard on me, judge." "What was hard?' asked the judge in his absent minded way. "Why, my first case. I wanted to get a little start, and here my cheat gets eighteen months." . "That's nothing," returned the judge, sen tentiously. "My first client got eight ? Chicago Tribune. All Out of Constitutions. Senator Btoclrbridge, of Michigan, is some thing of a wag. He was sitting in his com mittee room the other day when one of those fellows who are always demanding docu ments came in. The caller hod secured almost every book, pamphlet and bill which the government magnanimously prints and gives away. But ho still longed for more. "I am verynnxious," said he, "to secure a copy of the Constitution of the United States. Could I enlist your help, senator!" "Why. certainly; but it would be useless, The effort will be futile." "Indeed; and why?' "Well, you see, there were so many de mands from people like yourself for copies of this good work that the supply nearly ran out There was only one copy left, and the president bos just sent that to the pope." New York Tribune. Taller When Be lay Down. Governor Fitz Hugh Lee, of Virginia, who is very stout, recently amused some friends by telling the following story; "A few months ago a friend and I went sailing on a lake for the purpose of catching a few fish. While we were trying to get a bite a squall came up, overturned the boat, and we were both thrown into the water. I attempted to save my friend, but he sunk from sight and was drowned. Being a good swimmer, I thought of my life and what Virginia might suffer if I were drowned, so I mode for. the shore. While making lusty strokes my stomach touched the bottom, and, thinking I had reached shore, I turned on my feet, and to my surprise I found I was still over my head, I got to shore all right and the coun try was saved." Chicago News. All Out of Locks. Gen, Sherman has received so many re quests lately for autographs and locks of hair that be has had a reply printed that reads like this; "It is impossible for me to comply with all the requests for autographs, and I cannot send any more locks of hair because I have discharged my secretary, whose hair bad entirely disappeared under constant ap- pucation or. tue scissors, and the orderly who now serves me is entirely bald." Boston Transcript - Like Mr. (iulluguer Grandmamma has been explaining to the little girl how our earth is kept from Hying oil into infinite space by the at traction of the sun, which is constantly trying to draw the earth toward itself, while the latter always keeps its dis tance. "Grandmamma," said the little girl, "I should think the sup would get discouraged Bfter a while and, like Mr. Gallagher, 'let her go,'" Providence Journal. Vhe Coronation Stones of England. :. The most Interesting object In the whole of Great Britain is, poi'liapa, the famous "Stone of Scone," which forms the seat of the English coronation ohalr. ' This extraordinary Btone was brought to London by Edward I from Scotland as one of the spoils of the campaign after his defeat of the Scotch. It had been used In Scotland for centuries as a throne, on which the Scottish kings were crowned. Indeed, legend carries Its antiquity back to the days of the old patriarchs, and asserts it to have been the identical Btone en which Jacob slept at Bethel. Curious to say, It was predicted as early as the Fourteenth century that the Scottish kings, if they kept this snored stone from being profaned, would in time have their revenge by becoming kings of England, a prophecy which was literally fulfilled In the beginning of the Seventeenth century, when James VI of Scotland became JaineB I of Eng land. Edward I had a wooden chair made, in which he inclosed the Btone of Scone, this choir being the one still to be seen In the Abbey of Westminster, Every subsequent monarch of Great Britain down to Queen Victoria has been crowned while sitting on this his trionic stone. Geologists who have given the stone a professional examina tion doubt the legend connecting It with Jacob's dream and the Holy Land, declaring It to be composed of the com mon red sandstone so Well known on the coast of Scotland. St Louis Re public. . Identifying Handwriting. When the experto iu handwriting meet on the witness stand and swear hard against one another the jury has a difficult task. Nevertheless, there have beeu remarkable oases of identifi cation of handwriting. An English gentleman offered a large sum of money for the discovery of a marriage register, the production of which was necessary in an important lawsuit An officer iu a country ohurch wrote him that the missing register had turned up in the vestry box of his own parish. A lawyer and an expert in handwriting were sent to examine the document. The man showed them the marriage register, and after a careful examination they went to lunch. At the table the expert expressed an opinion unfavorable to the genuineness of the register. It was modem hand writing, uud did not therefore possess the antiquity claimed for it. "Then how in the world did It get there?" asked the church officer. "Why, you forged it yourself," quietly replied the expert, who had studied the handwriting in the note sent the gentle man. The man, being threatened with prosecution, fled the country, and thus confessed his crime. Youth's Compan ion. The Myriad Ways of Eating. Did you ever watch the myriad ways of eating? There is the aggressive eat er, who bites his bread as though tie owed it a grudge, and drinks bis coffee with eyes that fairly glare over the brim of his cup with unappeasable wrath; the timid eater, who nips his food apologetically; the preoccupied eater, who doesn't seem to know salt from sugar; the hungry eater, who eats as men have championed a lost cause. I never watch a company of eaters but I feel that the line of demarcation be tween the human family and the brute grows very faint and dim as it ap proaches this common center. I have often wondered if the race as it advances will not one day escape the bondage of the appetite. Relief can only come through methods of simpli fication. When science shall condense a whole beef bito a lozenge and the nutriment of a week's baking into a pastil we shall lose much of our present kinship with the brutes that perish, Chicago Herald. Br. Feabody's Contribution to Holmes. One of the lew failings that accom company Dr. Peabody's serene old age is his occasional absent-mindedness. It Is told of him that one summer day, coming in from Cambridge, after hav ing alighted from the car at Bowdoin square he turned a sharp corner and collided with an elderly gentleman who was standing with his hat off, wiping the perspiration from bin forehead, but who held his hat in such a way as to give the appearance of begging. Dr. Peabody, seeing the hat, dropped a quarter into it with his customary kind remark. Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, who was holding the hat, put the money in his pocket, solemnly thanked his old friend, the giver, and passed on. Boston Herald. A Bpeeulatton. "Chollie is in great glee today." "Why?" "He owed bis tailor 1505 for Ave years, and the tailor got mad and put the ac count up at public auction." "I should think that would make Chol lie mai." 5 "Oh, no. He went to the sale and bought it for eightvve cents." Hor ner's Bazar, , A Oush of tteneroetty. One of our clergymen married a raw young fellow from the country the otlnuf. day, and after tbeceremony the youth hnjuM oii: ' v uWoll, mister, how muuli for tlie juhj" The clergyman laughingly replied. "Oh, it Is customary to leave that to the bridegroom,"1! "Well, I'll tell ye, Mr. Minister," said the youth, coiilhloutlally,. -"I've got just a dollur In my pocket. The hnckmun'e got to have tlftv cents of It, ami If ynn want the otiier fifty, b'gosh you cuu have itl" Burlington Free Press. A Scare At the Quarters. Mrs, Alllbone Ruu git do gun. Hufim! I kiiuAud I'U Hud a man umlub d' buiii uiie r dew day, Judge. nartlett PoiiMiltttnry Thouelit. Misti Waller Oh, Mr. Bartlett, whenever I hear tho strains of Waldteufefs waltzes, aud see the couples gliding over the floor like this, 1 do so much regret never having learned to dance I Can't you offer me twine consolatory thought Mr. Bartlett Plenty of them, my dear Miss Waller. Why, if you had learned, you wouldn't have a good excuse for uot being taken out Harper's Bexar. Underpaid fleiilua. Poet What can 1 get on this poem, sir! Managing Editor '(after glancing at the ef fusion aud baggy trousers at the knees to make sure he is speaking to a poet) Well, 1 cannot give you nil that you ought to get, for I have rhuimntisin in both foot and am un armed, but you can take tliat door and chase yourself out as quiokly as you have a mind to. New York Herald. An Insult to New York. ' World's Fair Enthusiast I tell you, sir, in settling this question there must be uo par tiality shown I Chicago uud Now York mutt be placed on on equal footing. New Y or kw Impossible, unless "UnlesB whatr "Unless the Chicago girl is exterminated!' , Lawrence American. ' In Great Luck, "Poor D07I Your rather disinherited you, I hear," "Yes. Dear old dad, he always looked after me." "What do you meanf "Why, the old mun died head over heels in debt. All thut weut to my brothers." Har Ir's Bazar, Naming the Uity, "Nice dog you have there," said one trav eling man to another. "Yes." "What's hie namef1 "Grip." "Why 'Oripf "B. cause he was so easy to get and so hard to get rid of." Merchant Traveler. After the ItHllroad Aecldnnt. Husband (extricating himself from the wreck) timllyl Thank God you are safe! Heavens 1 isn't this awful Wife Dreadful! Hear the poor people groan. Jjearexti Husband What is It, love! Wife Is my baton straight? Burlington Free rresn Not a Fallacy. Professor Research sIiowb us that In some countries it has been a popular fuilacy that man was originally without teeth. Pupil 1 don't think It a fallacy, sir. Prof ossor And why! Pupil All the babies I ever saw were with' out teeth. National Weokly. Where It Was. Patient (to physician) I came to inquire anouc a cancer. Doctor Where te It locatedf Patient Twenty three and a half degrees norm oi tno equator, it is the tropic ox Can cer. Lowell Citixen. Going Higher. Mrs. Beansoup (to Mr. Krontroomt So joa attended the meeting of the Independent Order of Boarders last night I Mr. Fr oli i room laccideiitlystumbled into the meeting. "And you declared in burning words that the time has come when boarders should rise above the tyranny of the boarding house keeper." "I may have said something to that effect." "Well, as you wish to rise, Pve sent your trunk up to the fourth floor, back. Next time you make a bad break about boarding house tyranny, you'll room on the roof.'1 tiiua, Still Ahead. . Ho Pre got a brother s porllceman. i Bhs Bat's nufflu. I've got 'r bruthor s nuugoi. bile, A BOY iHERQ. In hwtrthw Parti, which to f orHfm eves tleems mstlo ot mirrors, saslUcht auilSlsplsy, . A. suloudld hultdlnR's walls begun toflse, . Ascending stone by stone fruin day to day. HlRh and more hlnh tho pile wan balMed welli' ' And senree oMabertmi wore HiHst.tbure, When suddenly s'frnglle staffing fell. And two strong workmen swung aloft In etr, Suspended by tholr bmids to one slight hold, Thut bent and orouked buneath their sudden voltthtl One woru with tell, and growing gray and old, Ouo a mere boy, Just reaching muu's estate. Yet with a hero's soul. Alnne and young, Were it uot well to yield his single life, On which no paront leaned, no children clung, . Aud save the other to his balie. and wUoT He saw that ore dollvorenee could be brought Tho frail support they grasped must suroly break, And In that shuddering moment's flash ot thought He chose to porlsh for his comrade's soke. With bravory snob as heroes sohtom know, " Tls right," he sutd, and loosing his strong grip. Dropped llko a stone upnu the stones below, Aud lay there dead, the smile still on his Up. What though no laurels grow his grave above, And o'er bis uunie uo sculptured shaft may rise! To the sweet spirit of unsulnsh love, Was nut his life a glorious sueriucef Elisabeth Akors In Harper's Voting People. Men Are to Illume for Female Frivolity. By the way, I think I occasionally hour a fwble pine from a man to the effect that the girls ure responsible for all the tomfoolery in the world. Don't you know that yon are the very ones who tend to make them so you men? You follow after aud woo and wed just that sort of girls. You won't look at a sensiblo little woman who can make "lovely" bread, abjures bungs, can't dance and has uo 'style. " You laugh at and make sly jokes at the expense of otir big hats anil our pronounced fashions, but when you choose your company, and often your wives, I notice you jiuss right by the homckeeping birds and take the pea cocks. If you won't have her modest and simply gowned she is willing to make a feather handed doll and a trav esty of herself to got you and win heaveul You know perfectly well, you men, that you don't care half so much for bruins as you do for "got-up," and the woman you honor with your choice is solecttd i or a pretty face and form and a becoming costume rather than for a clever head and an honest heart. I am not talking to old fogies who cling to old fashioned notions, but to yonng men who ridicule the customs of their grandmothers, who shake their lieudB at the salaries of two aud three thousand a year as inadequate to snpport wives; who rail agaiiMt woman's extrav agance, yet do their best to maintain her in it. When yon, my tine and dapper gnntlomnn, begin to seek out the mod estly appareled and the sedate girls, then shall folly and vain show fly over seas for want of encouragement and the grand transformation of sawdust dolls into women and pleasure seekers into homekeepers take place. Cor. Chicago Herald. A Child's Sense of Justice. Nothing seems to burn into the mem ory and heart of a child as an undeserved punishment, however trifling the mat ter may seem to the adult inflicter. In some children of the snnny, hopeful type the wave of indignation and help- ' less, unspoken protest against unjust correction passes away, and leaves ap parently no trace. To other children, with more sensitive natures or more re bellions dispositions, unjust words of re proof kindle tiros of rage, which smoul der with sullen persistence under the ashes of seeming forgetfulness, ready to burst out violently and unexpectedly.. If this seems an overdrawn picture one bas only to think backward at one's own cbilish days, and to recall the time when careless treatment by an elder first taught us to be bitter, unforgiving, re sontful. A child's sense of justice is as keen as bis heart is tender, and this is one of the qualities most nucessary to a noble char acter; a quulity that must be blended with truth and honor and self-sacrifice to give the right balance to dispositions which would otherwise work harm. A child's justice is always tempered with mercy to those he loves, and when in the home he is justly and tenderly dealt with he learns little by little that higher sense of justice toward all with whom he comes in contact. When his owu small rights are carelossly and continu ally thrust aside, he, too, learns to play the brigand, to invent devices to achieve the might which he has learned makes right. Harper's Bazar. Reptile, in the Mesoiulo EpooU. Early in the niesossoic epoch there ap- pcared marine reptiles which, inough de rived from land species, became more and more aquatic through the necessity of liv ing in water, developed on that acoouui swimming organs, etc. Land reptiles also began to develops in huge proportions. Why they grew so big no one knows, bnt it may have been because they had no rivals in the struggle for existence; thoy had all they wanted to eat and nat urally increased in bulk. At all events no creatures are kuown to have existed in this world comparable in size to thee reptiles of ages ago. Interview in Wash ington Star. The records say that there were in all 180,711 regulars aud 184,000 volunteers, . or 804,701 soldiers in the aggregate, on the American side in the war for inde pendence. The figures as to the number of sailors in that struggle vary within wide range.