A SUIT OF 'READY MADE CLOTHING fNE. morning in June Augustus Bunker received a letter. It is not such a very unus ual circumstance, -i j - ipnirlvX cheap postage, for y I an individual to receive a letter, that we have seen fit to chronicle it, i but by that letter hangs a tale. It came from Mr. Bunker's Aunt Mercy, who resided in the little suburban village of Tremont, We will look over car hero's shoulder while he reads it a very impolite proceeding1, but the only one which will give us a .knowledge of the contents: Dear AtcrsTts As warm weather Is at band and the city must be very hot and un comrortab'e, I write to you to come out and pass a few weeks with us at Tremont There 1 pood flshin r in the vicinity, and finer walks are not to te found anywhere than our city can boast. Also there are a host of pretty j-oun ladie here, which is no small recom mendation, I take it. My husband s niece Miss Helen Browne a charming younz irirl, U f pending the summer with us, so you will not l-e lonely. Please let us seo you early next week as possible. Your affectionate aunt. JlEKCY t'OSTEHSE" Augustus read the letter, and tossed np his hat. The very thing! He had just been wondering where he should ro to rusticate. Would he go? To be sure. Helen Browne a pretty name the first of it. and as for the family title it had been borne, and was still borne, by a great many respectable people. And spelled with a final e it looked very well written, but wnat mattered it. ain- way? it could be safely merged in the name of Bunker, and who would be the wiser? Tremont must be a paradise. And he had heard his mother say that Aunt Merej- was the very princess of good cooks. And good cooking was not to be despised by a fellow who -passed his life in a third-rate boarding-house, where fried mackerel was a treat, and boiled onions a luxury. Those fine walks? He could explore them with Helen. That capital fish ing? He wondered if Helen could put a worm on a hook without squirming. Wouldn't it all be glorious? glori o-u-s! Suddenly his castles fell. Jones and Smith were making him a suit of clothes, and it was three weeks yet to the time they had promised they should be finished; and Jones and Smith, though excellent work men, conld not always keep their en gagement. Augustus remembered with a shudder that it had been just nine months and three days after they had promised to finish the last suit they had got up for hiin, that they were finished. -"Well, well," remarked Augustus," '"deuce take the tailors, and deuce take the clothes! And I've not ;a thing to wear this melt ing weather. I can sympa thize with Miss Flora McFlimsey. But there are ready made clothing establishments. Jenkins patronizes them, and it's a pity if they can fit Jenkins, they can't fit me!" So that very afternoon Augustus -called upon Messrs. Pinch and Pullem and looked at their wares. Their stock looked well there was no gain saying that, and Mr. Pinch warranted the sewing to outlast the cloth. Augustus tried on a pair of lilac-col-oroI "riant aloon s. S;.Tni mf t ho v arc n. litflp tight." he remarked to Mr. Pinch. "Splendid fit. sir,' splendid!"' return ed that enthusiastic 'gentleman. . "Look as if they growed on you! Not a wrinkle, sir! and, by Jove! not a single baggy look about them any- wwhere! And ' they'll stretch, sir, AND HE VENT IN. -stretch to your form those Scotch cloths always do! Only piece of the Jcind in America! Imported it myself, ; sir! Splendid fit! I declare, sir, I couldn't have done better if I had ta- - ken 3'our measure.' So the pantaloons were purchased. Next cane the coat. Army blue Augustus could wear nothing else. He was patriotic to the backbone no youg man had done more for his country than he had. He had given ten cents weekly to the soldiers' aid .society; purchased worth of pin vushions and watch-cases of the pret ty girls at the sanitary fair and then lie had cheerfully yielded up his eousins, and his uncles, and his next door neighbors' sons, to help tight the battles of his country and he had fbe en heard to declare, on several oc- ca-sjons, that he was ready to if he conld leave his business and they called for him, but as lie never went, we must conclude that the army was . to full that they did not want him. '.The suit was purchased, and three days afterward Augustus, clad in the new clothes, "might have been seen" .in the cars en route for Tremont. He . had a, silk umbrella to protect his beaver if it rained, and a valise con- - taining the proverbial change of linen. Tremont was reached just before - nightfall, and at the depot he found his Uncle Jack and a young lady . awaiting him. . Shades of Venus! That young lady was the fairest feminine creature he 1. .1 .. 1 1 f-. 11 nwl lidu seen. iili uii t w . uuu round-top hat were magnificent! And i her face was such a concentration of i roses and lilies an I violets, and all set in the gilt frame of golden hair why, Augustus head whirled and he lp felt weak in the knees, like one who has taken a dose of tartar emetic. He rode to his Aunt Mercy's beside Helen, feeling very much like one in a blissful dream. Like the boy we have all heard of he didn't care Whether school kept or not. Helen had such a voice and such a hand and wore such charming bal moral boots, laced with scarlet. Aunt Mercv was a real princess a fairy god mother fully equal to Cin derella s,he thought, and he gave the old lady such a hug round -the neck that her collar-bone felt twisted for two hours afterward. For three whole days matters went on swimmingly. Helen and Augustus walked, and rode, and played chess. and wound stocking yarn for Aunt Mercy, and pulled the cat's ears, after the manner of young people from time immemorial. Of course Augustus fell in love, and of course Helen thought him a little the nicest you nsr man she had seen; and Uncle Jack and Aunt Mercy looked on approvingly. On the fourth day of his stay thero was a picnic in Maple Elm, a lovely grove by the side of Swift river. Augustus drove Helen over. He looked at her pink cheeks anj at the pink ribbons iu her hat, and at her braided skirt over which her buff chambray dress was looped and his resolution was taken. Before they returned home, he meant to know his fate. In consequence of making this decision he was nervous all the morning. He tied his horse by the handle of a din ner basket, put the blanket over a stump instead of over Dobbin, and said yes, sir, to Helen whenever she addressed him. But a man who is conscious of standing upon the brink of fate may be excused for making mistakes iu "ender. Augustus and Helen satdown a lit- ue apart irom tne others on a mossy hillock close by the bank of the river. The 3-oung man touched her hand, which lay on her lap. "My dear Helen," he began, "it is needless to disguise the truth! Con cealments arc " he had proceeded thus far when a gust of wind lifted Helen's hat, with the pink ribbons, and sent it dancing off in the direction of the river. Augustus sprang up suddenly and gave chase. He thought he heard a strange sonnd, but he was too intent in saving the hat to stop for mere sounds. He stooped and caught it just as it was going over the bank, and began to retrace hii steps. "Oh, Mr. Bunker!" cried Miss Mer rill the most delicately modest of all old maids, and a little near-sighted 'You are losing your pocket-handkerchief! Goodness gracious!" cried she, taking a better look; "it is not a pocket-handkerchief! Oh, my soul and body!" Augustus looked at himself and felt inclined to say oh, my soul and body! himself for he came to the knowl edge with one glance, that thos3 pantaloons which were such "a splen did fit," had burst up like the boiler of a Mississippi steamboat, and his red flannel drawers were striping him off like the red paint on a barber's pole. "The d dickens!" cried he, tak ing a step backward, with some sort of a vague idea of escaping some where. That step was fatal he was so near the brink of the river, that nothing could save him, so he went in. Fortunately he could swim, and not stopping to deliberate he made for the opposite bank, which he reached in safety. He looked back and oh, horrible! There on the oppo site shore stood Helen, and three or four other girls and they were all giggling. This was a drop too much. Return he could not, and at the top of his speed he made for the woods. Toward night he came upon an old farmhouse, and to the mistress he related his melancholy adventures, and received from her a loan of her "old man's" bark-colored un whisperables in which to return to the city. Augustus received a letter of con dolence from his Aunt Mercy, and Helen sent her love, and hoped he would come to Tremont in season for the blueberries but Augustus gave vent to a hard word that looks bad on paper, and burnt the latter. A year afterwards he married a red-haired widow with five children and it is our opinion that the present Mrs. Bunker owes her position en tirely to a suit of ready made clothing. Caue of the Ynlriinoe on the Moon. Tho best existing map of the moon's surface, one devoted e pe eially to the mountainous regions, shows 132,856 crater-shaped projec tions, of which number upwards of 100, 00 J may be seen by aid of a tele scope of only medium power. The origin of these craters has been the subject of much discussion of late amonc the astronomers, it being the opinion of many eminent authorities that they were caused by the lunar surface (probably at a time when it was in a plastic state) being bom barded with aerolites o meteorites. Dr. Gilbert was the first geologist of high standing to favor this curious opinion basing the idea on the fact that one of the craters in Arizona was actually formed b the falling of such a fctone from the heavens. Lion an -I Hi r.4e. If a lion and a strong horse were to pull in opposite directions the horse would pull the lion backward with comparative case; but if the lion wero hitched behind the horse and facing in the same direction. and were allowed to exert its strength in backing, he would easily pull the horge down upon his haunches or drag him aero s the rng. to much greater is his st rength when ex'erted backward from the hind legs than in forward pulling. Chicago Journal He Need Not Depalr. George, in despair I must be an idiot. I don't seem to be able to find any suitable vocation. Mabel, tearfully. Never mind. George. If worst comes to worst you can become a diplomatist Chicago Keccrd. A Cnlversal Fallinc. What's old Swizzles, the million aire, looking so pleased about? He just lost $10, ')0) in stocks." 5" Yes, but afterward he managed to,. get a free tick:t to a seventy-fi;e eelit show." Chicago Record. PRIVATE DETECTIVES. A. Vast Amount of Humbujr and Illark malliur Done by Them. It is a long while since the court nave dealt with the private detec tives, and as a result the men who ply this particularly nefarious trade are becoming unusually prominent aain in Now York. They are advertising extensively, says the New lork Sun, and many of the old offices, which were shut up when the crusade against them began in earnest a few years ago. have been reopened and the old shingles hung out again. Tho private detectives wero driven out of business by the newspapers and the strict attitude in the matter taken by the police. The work of these men is nearly always sneakish in character. They make & special ty of preying upon the jealousy or sus picions of married women, and their business is a lucrative one. because, as is generally known to the police, they almost invariably sell out to bcth parties. A woman who is sus picious of her husband is caught by the attractive advertisement of one of these agencies and ventures into tho clutches of the manager of the concern. She wishes to have her husbmd shadowed, and two men are detailed to watch his movements. Shadowing is no longer profitable in New York, and is seldom resorted to by the regular police force. If the detective succeeds in find ing out one or twofu-.ts about a man that he would not care to have his wife know, he makes an arrangement with him by which all the reports submitted to her are revised by him. In other words he writes the reports, while tho detectives take up some other case. Their charge is usually ?4 a day for each man who is sup posed to be shadowing a victim, so it costs the wife a day for a re port which her husband dictates, which usually ows him in the light of a painstaking and unexception able husband. The amount which the husband pays depends upon the ability of tne agency to beat him. It has been proved in scores of in stances that the business is one of blackmail and fraud, and tho police view with some alarm the great in crease 01 agencies during tho past year. Shameful Wantc I.ord-Chanceilor Eldon was ener getically aided in his parsimonious iiabits by his wife, of whom it was said that 6he and her daughter but one bonnet between them, morning, intending to enjoy a hours' sport after a rainy night, had One few he ordered Bob, the pony, to be saddled. Lady Kldon told him he could not have it. but company beinjr in the roOiii, gave no reason. In a few minutes, however, the servant ap peared and announced that Bob was roady. "Why, bless me!" cried her ladyship, "you can't rile him. Lord Kldon. he has trot no shoes on. Oh, yes! my lady," said the ser vant, "he was shol last week." Shameful!" e:-.claimed her lady ship; "how dared you, sir. or any body, have that pony shod without orders? John," continued she, ad dressing her husband, "you know you only rode him out shooting four times last year, so I had his shoes taken off, and have kept them in my bureau ever since. They are as good as new, and these people have shod him again; we shall be ruined 3, this rate!" Argonaut Too Small for Cat. The young man from tho city hat been fishing. He hadn't had much luck, but it was more than he was used to, and he looked very jubilant as he strode into the farmhouse kitchen with his catch. What'je git?" asked his host 'Oh, nothing much. Just a few catfish." "Mean them?" the farmer inquired, pointing with his pipostem. "Certainly. They're not very large. But there's no doubt about their being catfish." "Wal, ir.ebbe they passes fur cat fish out whur you coma from. But here we calls them kitten lish. Den ver Tribune. (Ine Sirarro ol Opposition. "It seeus a shame." sa'd a visitor at tho capitol, "for a man to serve his country faithfully and then bt aropped out of sight. I'm m favor of lettin' 'em hold ortico during good behavior." "Well," replied his companion, "it might be a good idea. Hut I dou't know but some o' the senators ud look at it as an effort to shorten their terras." Washington Star. Large Head With Small Krln. Dr. Crochley Clapbam. wno ha. made measurements on 4.000 inmates of asylums, says that insane heads are larger on the average than sane heads, though insane brains are smaller. According to Dr. Clapharr the form of the insane head is usu ally cuneiform or arrow-shaped, with the greatest diameter posterior to the central point of the head. Kel-s on Siht. Peddler Have yoj any daughter s, mum? Housekeeper Sir! Please, mum, I don't ask out of vulgar cu riosity, mum. I'm selling resona tors." "What are' they?" "You hang on3 up in the hall. mum. and it so magnifies every sound that a good-night kiss souuds like a cannon shot" "(Jive me three." New York Weekly. At the l'ltnlo. Young Man Miss Esmerelda. per mit me to kiss those ruby Hps just ouee. Young Lady O, no. Mr. De Smith, nor nun has ever kissed me. Young Man Me either; I'll swear to it Yum, yum! Texas Sittings. A lie rt felt Wish. Pedestrian, to beggar I have little money to give you. because I am a poet. and. what is more, my poems are not to be published until I am dead. Here's ten cents. Beggar Long life to yo. sir. N. Y. Weekly. Nankie Doodle. The air now known as "Yankee Doodle" is older than the time of Cromwell, and was well known in the colonies prior to the revolution under the name of "Nankie Deodla." DOWN IN THE SHAFT. SWARMS OF RATTLESNAKES IN A DESERTED MINE. lie Wat Hard Up, ao He Took the Job of ('leaning The 111 Out for One Hun dred Dollars Wouldn't Care to Repeat the Experience at Higher Kates. "I earned $100 once in less than two hours working in a mine," said Charles Campbell, a compositor, but I had to kill 120 rattlesnakes to do it I wouldn't do the job over again for less than $1 per snake. I was in hard luck on the coast, and happened to drift into the fine gold district of the San Joaquin, where a company was working the White Quartz mine. At the time I dropped in on 'em they found that they had to bring back into the service again a shaft that had been abandoned sev eral years before. The shaft was Hd feet deep, and thero was a tunnel at the bottom of the same length. "Through long disuse the ehaft had become choked with debris at the mouth of the tunnel, and it had to be cleaned out before the shaft could be used again. "The very day I got there tho company had sent two workmen down the shaft to dig out the debris, but they bad hardly landed at the b ttom before thev signaled frantic ally to be hauled up. When the bucket got to the top the two men were cowering in the bottom of the bucket, pale as ghosts, and so nearly scared to death that they had to be helped out. It was some time be fore they were able to give any ex planation. Rattlesnakes was what ailed them. The shaft, they said, was full of rattlesnakes, lying about everywhere, big and ugly. They were so thick, they declared, that the noise of their rattles in tho depths of disturbed them deaf. tho shaft, when the men tho colony, almost made The men had not dared step from the tub, but had signaled hastily to be raised to the surface. "A lantern lowered to the bottom of the shaft showed that the men knew what they were talking about. The depths were literally alive with big rattlers, and they writhed and tumbled about, furious at the intru sion of the light among them. Some of the savage old chaps struck their fangs against the glass of the lan tern, so that we could hear the sound of the contact where we stood gazing down on the cheerful sight from the mouth of the shaft, and the noise of the fierce chorus of rattles was like the rasping of a field full of locusts. The sight and sound made me homesick. 1 haven t seen or heard anything like that for years not since I left ray native place in the big coon country. Tennessee. "That rattlesnake music at the bottom of the mine shaft "way out on the Pacific coast made me honiosick. I began to pine for the big coon country, but I hadn't a cent. If 1 hadn't been so homesick I don't be lieve I'd have jumped at tho o.Ter the superintendent of the mine made after ho found there was no other way to get those rattlers out of that shaft. 1 will give $100 in gold.' he said. to any one who will clean out them snakes!' "I stepped to the front. "Make it $10) ia gold and a quart of whisky and I'll go you!" said I. "He added the whisky and we closed the deal right there. I bor rowed a pair of buckskin leggings and a pair of buckskin gloves Arm ing myself with a long club and the bottle of whisky, and taking a lan tern, I jumped into the tub and they lowered me to the bottom of the shaft I hadn't intended to be hoist ed until I had bagged all the rat tlers in sight But. after threshing away for twenty minutes at the snakes as they hurried away to hid ing places or showed light, and kill ing all that I could get my club on, the poisonous odor that exudes from these deadly reptiles when they are angered was too much for me. Even Pacific coast whisky couldn't coun teract it. and I felt mj-self growing dizzy and faint. 1 had thrown into the tub tho rattles I had killed, and was getting into it myself to signal for a hoist beforo I succumbed to tho noxious rattlesnake air I was breathing, when, in a niche in 0110 side of the shaft, even-with my shoulder, not a foot and a half away from ray throat, I caught sight of a big rattler coilei and ready to strike. "Mechanically 1 threw my head and shoulders back, just as the snake launched his big. arrow-like head at my throat. That movement of mine savcd.me. Tho rattler's aim fell short His fangs were buried in the collar of my coat, an inch from my jugular. I instantly clutched the reptile with one hand around its neck, and with the other, as I tum bled unconscious into the tub. I pulled the rope. I did not know when I reached the top, but tho superintendent told me when I came to that when the men who were at tho windlass saw me in the tub and what I wits bring ing up with mo, they dropped tho crank and ran. But for the fortu nate presence of a stalwart Mexican (a giant miner named Valarez), who caught the crank as it came around and held it. I would have gone plunging back to the bottom of the shaft, and my fate would not have been pleasant. "And I can't say that I blame the men much who were manning that windlass. Lying in the bottom of the tub. apparently deal. I was still clutching the big rattler by the throat, his fangs almost in mine. and lying about m were twenty-seven enormous anl hideous looking rat tlers, victims of my club. Seems to me I'd have dropped something my self and ran if I had seen such a sight a that coming up out of the dark depths of a mine shaft I revived in a few minutes, and was soon feeling in shape to go down and finish ray contract I don't know how I could have done it, but in the twenty minutes I was in the shaft I had drank half of thequart of whisky. I remained Ja the bot tom forty-five minute that trip, and I brought out Sfy. seven dead rat tlers to the surf J;e. I had to chase some of them iijft0 the sloping tun nel. I hai at Wbed the remainder of tho whisky, ;4nd when I made my third trip ten minutes after I car.n up. I took down another pint I was down just forty-five minutes I garnered forty-eight rattlers, and finished the third pint of whisky. If there was another snake left in the shaft or tunnel I could not find it, and the superintendent hand ed me over five twenty-dollar gold pieces. VENICE BUILT IN A SWAMP. The City . Founded., as a Itefuze From Savage Northern Invaders. The city of Venice is approached from behind by a railroad construct ed over a stretch of swamp which is not very unlike the near ap proach to several New Jersey coast towns. There is a trifle more water and not so much grass, but, according to a writer in the Phila delphia Telegraph, the ride into the city is anything but a subject for a chapter of fine romance. Ont be yond this swamp was another swamp which was a little higher. It had been out of the water longer, and had caught enough of seaweed, sand. shells and sediment to be fit for birds to nest on. ihere was one island called tho I'ialto. which was really quite secure, and around this one there was said to be about seventy five or eighty other islands, which to-day are occupied by the rity of Venice. Some of these were origin ally not islands at all. They were mere high places in a great bog. which, by the cuttUig of channels and by artificial means, were converted into more or less fit places for the erection of buildings. Without consulting his tory, one could almost guess that such an unfavorable spot as this was not selected as the site for a city out of free choice; and, indeed, it was not. Venice was started during the fifth and sixth centuries. Tho inhabitants of Padua and a few more north lloman cities, chased out by the Huns, the Goths and other tribes of barbarians, took refuge there in au Adriatic lagoon. The savages of Asia had no boats, so that the settlement was very safe, and. leading an independent life, prospered by itself during the mid dle aires at a surprising rate. It was a monstrous work to make the city secure from the sea. Ship loads of stone were brought from other coasts. Dams and canals were built at great cost, and the residents finally got enough of dry land about them to feel moderately safe. It was still, however, a difficult thing to find foundations for the houses. especially as many of the rich men desi.ed to put up heavy marble pal aces, and it frequently costs more in Venice to-day to sink the rocks and piles for a house than it docs to put on the superstructure. Few cities have ever been built under greater difficulties. Shell Still Servd as Money. A small part of the commerce of the world is still carried on by the use or shells as a medium of ex change. The Portuguese found this sort of money in use by the natives of the eastern coast of Africa when they opened up trade in tnat region and have found it to their advantage to continue the practice. Fortunes a-e said to have been made by col lecting the shells on one part of the African coast and putting them in circulation at a pcint only a few hundred miles away. These shells are sold by weight The price varies according as the supply compares with the demand. Prices have been known to double and even treble within a few months. The prices also vary greatly within short dis tances. What has cost the merchant from fifty cents to $1 iu the market will often bring him $7 or $ worth of goods. A Difference of Views. "I am almost afraid. Miss Squeers, said the impecunious young man who had taken her to an after-theater supper, for which he had been hoard ing money for months, "I am almost afraid to ask you to cat such a meal as this just before going to bed." "Oh, never mind," answered Miss Squeers. smiling pleasantly. "If it doesn't answer we can easily order some more, you know." Chicago Record. Colors. Bed denotes courage; blue, truth, white, purity; green, jealousy, yel low, inconstancy: black, mourning; brown, melancholy; yray, remem brance; violet, sympathy. rnrnmonU in Valparaiso. Nearly one-fifth of the deaths in Valparaiso are from pneumonia. In Bombay the deaths from the same disease are in the ratio of only twenty-six in 10.0J0. JESTS AND JOKELETS. Bacon They say Mrs. Shrew's mind is all gone. Egbert I'm not surprisetl. She used to give her husband apiece of it every day. "Brifkins has graduated from the law school, hasn't he?" "Yes." "Prac ticing?" "Not yet He's looking for somebody to practice on." Ethel Was the wedding a very brilliant ones? Gladj-s Oh, very. They had to employ four detectives to watch the wedding presents. Judge If I let j'ou off this time, will you promise not to come brcc here again? Prisoner Yes, sir. The fact is, I didn't come voluntarily this time. Mrs. Slimdiet Why do you bring the dog into the house? Cook Please, mum, the boarders always inquire after him w'en thero is sausage fer breakfast "Aw, Bunkins is socially ostra cised." "Yes." "Completely an out cast" "Completely. His social status is so low that he couldn't even lend money to a titled foreigner." "Fitzgoober's wife leads him a ter rible life; she's constantly quarreling with him." "Indeed; why I didn't think she ever lost her temper." "She don't; it is always with her." "You spoke to them in French, I noticed. Why was that?" "I wanted to discover if he was an American." "And he was?" "Of course, or he'd never have understood my French." "Gotrox has sent that woodeu headed son of his on an ocean voyage. I wonder what for?" "I understand someb )dy told him if there was anj--thing in the boy the sea would bring it out." CAUGHT BY AN OCTOPUS. A WOMAN'S ADVENTURE ON A PACIFIC ISLAND. The Ileautirul Shell in the Deep Tool Was Not a Shell, lint a Devil Fish That Wound Its Horrible Arms About Her With Death-Like irlp. There is one woman in San Francisco who read the account of the capture of a giant octopus at Monterey the other day with a shudder at the recollection of an en counter which she had long ago with one. Some fifteen years ago she was living with her husband on a little coral island just below the equator. The only inhabitants were the two white people mentioned and fifty or sixty Hawaiians to work the guano fields. The superintendent and little child wiJi news from the outer reach them but once in hal his wife him. and as world could three months it was rather dull for the woman. As there was so little amusement to be found, she made the most of the few sources that she had. Chief among these was tho gathering of shells, of which many and tine va rieties were to bo at low tide. One day mother out almost the fairlv well laden found on the ree and son had whole tide, with spoils bo en and were working back home, when, as she stepped across one of the smaller pools, the woman saw at the bottom what appeared to be a magnificent leopard cowry, the larirest she had yet seen. The water was pretty deep in the pool, being a'.ruost up to her waist as sho stepped down into it. but she was so near home that she did not care, though she got wet through. Stooping to pick up the shell, she found that the water was even deeper than she had supposed, for as her fingers reached to the bottom of the pool her face was almost wet by the waves which came rippling in with the rising tide. But the moment re quired to pick up a shell would not injure her, even though sho had to put her face into tho water, so she stooped lower, with closed eves and grasped at the shell below. Her finger closed on the richly spotted object, but instead of the hard, smooth surface she expected to seize, her fingers sunk deep into some soft slimy substance and be fore she could drop it and rise from her stooping position a sudden splash and flurry dashed the water into foam, and two snakelike ob;ects arose from the depths and twined themselves around her arm. bare to the shoulder, with numbing force. The water, but a moment before clear as a crystal, was in an instant clouded with ink and another snake like form rose and twined around her arm. increasing the forco and pressure until she suffered agony from the hold upon her arm, as well as from the fright caused by the sudden attack of the unseen foe. Her face was scarcely three inches above the surface of the pool, and. to her horror.she found the strength of the creature was sufficient to keep her from risin? any higher, and she knew that a few moments more of the pain would weaken her so that she must be drawn down into the pool instead of being able to escape from tho horrible creature which held her in its grasp. la the first shock a shriek of fear had startle 1 the boy, who was sonii distance from her. and he came run ning back to see what hai caused the cry. Jle was only 3 years old, so he coula be of no assistance; indeed, tho mother feared the child also might bo grasped and dragged into the pool. She called to him to run to the house, some little distance away, around a point of land which hid it from sight and cali for help. 'I 'ho tide was rising rapidly. Wave after wave cani3 rippling and swish ing against her form, each one breaking a little higher dashing a little more of its spray in her bended face. Death seemed very near, but her only fear was of the horrible beak which she knew would be buried in her quivering flesh a? soon as sho should lose her strength and fall into the pool to where the devil fish couli grasp her with all its arms. She could not raise her head to see if help wi coining, but she strained her ears, hoping to hear footsteps or voices. Not a soand met her stra nod hearing. The water roso higher and hisjher. Each wave now broke in her face almost over her head. A wave bigger and . higher than usual came rollioer in and broke over her head, leaving her strangled and breathless. Hope wa gone. Sho must die. Put as she gave a last strangled cry a suaaen rusn 01 ieei, a uasu through the water, and her arm was grasped by strong hands, and she was raised above tho surface a little. Other hands reached down beside her and grasped the unseen form of the monster, and with a mighty pull from the two strong pair of arras it was torn from it anchoring hold upon the rocks and thrown up into the open air. The choking, strangling woman was carried above the tide mark. The octopus still attached to her by its slim arms. As the attempt to pull it away caused her excruciating pain, the arms were one by one cut off, and even the horny disks still clung with considerable force to the bruised and crushed arm. The creature had user! three of its eight arms to crush its prey, and held it self firmly anchored to tho rock at the bottom of the pjol with the others. It took all tho strength of two heavy men to tear the hold of those five arms from the rock. When the creature was dead and spread out on the sand it measured only seven feet from the body to the end of the longest ray. The body was about the size and shape of a big wash bowl, turned bottom up. The hooked, horny beak, shaped almost like that of a parrot, but shortnr in nrooortion to its width. -,1 a nioori hfltween two wicked little eves not larger than one's thumb naiL iln Company With Kojjues. 'P-aints have frequently boon ith regard to the unreliabil ity of tho Faris guides, who ,-a Uvin showing strangers 1 S bv the sights of tho city, more partic ularly tho nocturnal ones in tha haunts of its less reputable quar ters. It is said that some of these guides are in league with rogues and reprobates, who make it a point to fleece the too-confiding sight-seers and share the profits with the guides. A petition has recently been pre sented to the municipal council ask ing that body to appoint a special set of guides, responsible to the authorities. CHASING THE WALRUS. m Hunt I'p Arnold Pike's Btory of Iu Hlrd Bay. Arnold Pike tells in the Chicago Times of a walrus hunt in Bird bay. to the north of Spitzbergen. The bay was full of fast ice, but eastward the sea was fairly open ana the hunt er was rowing slowly back to the sloop, when the harpooner suddenly laid aside his glass and headed the boat for a black mass which the mirage magnified into tho size of a small house, but which was really a walrus. The walrus raises his head, and we are motionless," says Mr. Pike. "It is intensely still, and the scrap ing of a piece ol ice along the boat, seems like the roar of a railway train passing overhead on some bridge. Down goes the head and wo glide forward again. The walrus is uneasy; again and again he raises his head and looks around with a quick motion, but we have the sun right at our back, and he never notices us. At last wo are within a few feet, and with a shout of 'Vu-k op, gambling." (Wake up. old boy!), which breaks the stillness like a shot, the harpooner is on his feet, his weapon clasped in both hands above his head. As the walrus plunges into the sea the iron is buried in his side, and with a quick twist, to pre vent the head slippinsr out of the same slit that has been cut in the thick hide, tho handle is withdrawn and thrown into the boat. No. i who, with a turn round the forward thwart, ha been paying out tho line, now checks it, as stroke and the "hammelmand," facing forward, hang back on their oars to check the rush. Bumping and scratching the ice we are towed along for about five minutes and then stop as the walrus comes to the surface to breathe. In the old days the lance would finish the business, bat now it is the rifle. He is facing the boat. I sight for one ot his eyes and let him have both barrels, without much effect apparently, for away we rush for two or three minutes more. when he is up again, still facing the boat. Ho seems to care no more for the solid express bullets than if they .vere peas, but he is slow this time. and. as he turns to dive, exposes the fatal spot at the ba?k of his head and dies. " DOGS HAVE THEIR LANGUAGE. The Collie Came for Help and the New foundland Itenpouled. When engaged in locating a rail way in New Brunswick James Cam den, a civil engineer, was compelled one night by a very severe snow storm to take refuge in a small farm house, says Forest and Stream. Tho farmer owned two dojs one an old Newfoundland and the other a collie. In due time the farmer and his fam ily went to bed, the Newfoundland stretched himself out by the chimney corner and Mr. Camden and the man with him rolled themselves in their blankets on the floor in front of tho fire. The door of the house was closed by a wooden latch and fast ened by a bar placed across it Mr. Camden and his man were just tailing asleep when they heard the latch of the door raised. They did not get up immediately, and in a short time the latch was tried again. They waited a few minutes and then Mr. Camden rose, unfastened the door and looked out. Seeing nothing, ho returned to his blankets, but did not replace the bar across the door. Two or three minutes later the latch was tried a third time. This time the door opened and the coilio walked in. Ho pushed the door back, walked straight to the old New foundland and appeared to make some kind f a whispered communica tion to him. Mr. Camden lay still and watched. Ihe old dog roia and followed tho other out of the house. Both presently returned, driving be foro them a valuaolo ram bolon-infr to the farmer, which had become separated from the rest of the flock. and was in danger of perishing in tho storm. Now, how did the collie mpart to the other dog a knowledge of the situation unless through some supersease unknown to us? Irish Arts and Crafts. An Irish arts and crafts society has just been formed in Dublin for the purpose of stimulating the in dustries of Ireland and attempting t; raise the craftsmen to a higher ar- istic leveL The society is endeavor- ng to organize an exhibition of Irish arts and crafts, to be held in Dublin in the autumn of 18iJ5. HISTORICAL LIES. There was probably no suc i man as Romulus. The first historian who mentions hitn lived at a distance of time so great as to throw extrenu dis credit on the story as told by hiiu. Alexander the Great did not weep for other worlds to conquer. There is reason to suspect that his army met with a serious reverse in India, a fact that induced him to retrace his steps. The crew of Le Vengeur.the famous French ship sunk by an English man-of-war, did not cry "Vive la Uepub lique!" They bawled for help, and the English boats were sent to their assistance. Worshipers are not crushed by hundreds under the wheels ofJug-r-rnaut The car has not been taken out of the temple for many years, and such deaths as formerly occurred were exceptional or accidental. The immense burning glasses with which Archimedes burned the ships of the besiegers of Syracuse at ten miles distance were never manu factured, and it is now known that they could not have existed. Pitt did not use the expression, "The atrocious crime of being a young mn." The words were used by Dr. Johnson, who was not present, but xvTOte a report of the speech from oe attract given h'm by a hearer. V AVI "to taia ft i r ' J