r H K h j t Id r i II Mil J I I i i j 3 j 1 f iit I - TOPICS OF THE TIMES A CHOICE SELECTION OF INTER ESTING ITEMS Comments and Criticisms Baser Upon the Happening ot the Day His torical and News Notes Old King Malietoa is dead and the next thing to expect is Samoa troubles At Newport the latest fad Is a stable ball Of coure the fashionable spec tators all occupy stalls Advices from the Sudan state that a great many of the howling dervishes have stopped howling Lieutenant Peary is a true expansion st lie has the American flag with him and has pole one north looking for the One consequence of the war is that the muse of history may close for good the chapter treating of Spain and the Western coutiuent The President again showed himself lo be a magnanimous and kind-hearted gentleman by refusing to notice CoJ ITays early poems Encircled by her soldiers Hollands queen -was enthroned And what men wouldnt be willing to surround a pret ty girl of IS -with their arms If the magazines begin telling how victories could have been won right in vpc it partly keeps in countenance Blancos winning them with a type writer The Paris Figaro says the Star-Spangled Banner is older than any of the present standards of Europes powers And whats more its the greatest fls of the age A contemporary asserts that matter of fact throughout the war France was Spains alley as a entire And yet Spain evinced no inclination to run lown her neighbor republic Since the railway disaster at Sharon Lhe timorous Massachusetts people have become opposed to traveling in the rear car Thats easily enough fix ad Gut the rear car off the train A protocol meant originally a leaf lued into the front of a book The United States however prefers to in sert it at the end of the volume and write there Finis to the Spanish-American war General Pando says General Toral should be court martialed for surrend ering Santiago If Pando had not been so busily engaged in arranging for an ulibi at that time he might now be in a position to figure in the court martial appendix Two nations benefit by the fact that Admiral Cervera and his men have been our prisoners of war We are the yetter for the opportunity to be mag nanimous ami Spain must always cor dially remember that the opportunity was nobly improved One thing most impressively taught hy our short war with Spain is that war is a serious business and the art of -war is a difficult profession that can- lot b take up offhand but requires careful training and diligent prepara ion The navy has furnished the most conspicuous example of this truth but the army has taught it quite as impres sively Extraordinary feats of bravery de serve recognition and not an officer in the navy will be found to complain jver the promotion of a Dewey a Schley or a llobson but if the com manders and juniors of every ship that nas had the luck to take part in battle are to be rewarded some method of loing so should be devised which will uot in effect impose a fine upon their less fortunate comrades Side by side with bicycling equestri anism grows iu popular favor though he man and woman on horseback may uot always look with admiration on he bicycle and the wheelman may sometimes choose to regard the horse man as snobbish and behind the age in crowded cities the horse is not used nearly as much as it used to be and there is room for hope that ir soon will be used even less But on track and speedway the horse holds his own and animals of good breed and training are always in demand It may be taken as a gratifying sign of a healthy social evolution that the interest in out-of-door sports is evi dently growing from year to year More people ride the bicycle row boats go -swimming or poke golf balls over the aeld than ever before The colleges no floubt have had much to do with this and were it not for the interest revived annually by such institutions as Yale Princeton Harvard and Cornell and the universities of the western states football rowing and track and field athletics would be in a sorry condition But any one who has watched certain tendencies of the last fifteen years must have noted that the increased ac tivity in athletics is by no means con fined to the colleges Ten years time has been the bicycle come into universal use while football has become almost a fad More significant than all is the rapidity with which golf has gained attention and popularity notwithstand ing the obstacles which attend its ac climatization The game has two ad vantagesit presents sufficient diffi culties to enlist the attention and hold the interest of skilled players and it n ffo ills a mild amusement for the bung lers who can merely promenade through it It is a pity however that it should have divided so much attention from which is still Bean the head of spurts fcr developing grace agility and endurance The interest in public ten nis contests is still alive but the ama teur enthusiasm in the sport which was manifested two or three years ago when tennis courts everywhere were scenes of brisk activty seems to have waned With this possible exception the amount of time and attention given to exercises out of doors increases steadily The eventual result is bound to be not only a physical improvement but a healthier mental and moral condi tion of the race To a certain extent a peoples sports are an index of their character So long as the taste for ath letics is hearty there is little fear of their succumbing either to slothfulnes or morbid forms of dissipation Things have come to such a pass in France that if anybody says justice he Is suspected of a desire to subvert the government The Siecle reports an extraordinary occurrence in connec tion with the recent official celebration of the Michelet centenary An ode writteu for the occasion by M Maurice Bouchor was objected to by the Min ister of Public Instruction because the poet had been imprudent enough to put into it the word justice In one of the stanzas he had invoked the shades of Michelet lingo and Quinet to recall to the minds df Frenchmen and to the world that France is the champion of right M Brisson saw at once that this would never do The poet might as well have said outright that he thought Dreyfus illegally convicted and what would become of society then So he sent for M Bouchor and labored with him for an hour in the at tempt to get him to withdraw two of his stanzas But the poet concluded to withdraw the whole of his poem I see he said that I am not made to sing at official ceremonies And he declared that under the circumstances he was not sorry to have no part in a glorification of Michelet by the existing government of France The irony of it was too cruel Some of the newspapers on the con tinent are beginning to be concerned about the fate of Spain They should not forget that Spain is a nation of 18 000000 people with habits customs and prejudices of their own and that they will continue to be a distinct com munity in Europe The only change which has occurred in Spain is that she has gone out of the colony business It took Spain four centuries to demon strate to the world that she was utter ly incapable of colony government She failed to see the handwriting on the wall that a colony must be governed for trade and not for tribute She con tinued to govern on the old system of plunder and pillage of oppression and taxation and consequently bred more revolutions than she could quell She has lost all of her colonies and de servedly so But there is yet hope for Spain The hope lies within the bor ders of Spain itself Spain must turn her attention to her home resources She must develop herself internally She is yet supreme in certain avenues of -industry and she can make the world turn to her for certain of her commodities She has much to do in the uplifting and enlightening of her own people She has much to do in the reduction of the proportion of il literacy Spains future will be bright er than her past Park Benjamin has recently summed up quite clearly the causes of Spains naval defeats both at Manila and San tiago by an analysis of the condition and action of the two navies These causes he assigns as folloAvs p Gun platforms which cease to be platforms as soon as ignited 2 Machinery which failed to drive the ships at maximum speed because no one on board knew how to make it do so 3 Guns capable of projecting 4S27 pounds of steel a minute throwing it into the ocean and not against the enemy 4 This com bination of inefficiency crushed by a weight of steel bolts hitting it at the rate of nearly GT20 pounds per minute Added to these causes of defeat Spain has no organized naval engineer corps This Mr Benjamin says is what kept the lleet at Cape Yerde Islands and when it sailed it did so with men who were without experience in the handling of the huge and delicate pro pelling machinery What chance had such people of getting their ships away from the engineers who had carried the Oregon over its voyage of 14500 miles without a broken rod and who thes and there sent it flying through the water at a speed greater than that Avhich it made on its trial trip An other element of weakness was the fact that the Spanish ships were con tract vessels built by foreigners and accepted without intelligent super vision by the men who were to use theni C Reviving- Roman Customs The queen of Italy is going to re-establish an old Roman institution which has fallen into disuse for over twenty years Its object is to give a dowry of 30 ducats to lo0 Roman maidens on their marriage Formerly a church broliherhood used to decide on the mer its of the recipients but her majesty intends now to have a committee of ladies for the purpose Probably the procession of the selected girls through the streets of Rome on the first Sun day in October will be revived The queen will herself provide the funds for the -charity x Deft Smoking Japanese jugglers are deft smokers Several of them will sit before a cur tain and with the tobacco smoke which Issues from their mouths will form a succession of readable letters Whenever a man becomes wise he is the first to discover his wisdom A girl man becomes wise he is the first to discover his wisdom C - IN THE BROOMCORN BELT Crop Proves Profitable in Certain Parts of Illinois The busy day for the broomcorn grower is harvest time The time ex tends from the 1st of August until Oct 1 This is arranged by the -time of planting which is during the months of May and June The farmer plants his broomcorn so that it will ripen at different times during the harvesting period Great judgment must be used in cutting or harvesting it If it is cut before ready it will not weigh well and the fiber is not up to standard Then if it is ripe or nearlj so it will be colored and that will detract from the price The ground is ployed and thor oughly pulerized before planting breaking the stalks and laying them across each other so as to form a ta ble about three feet high A man passes along on each side of the table and cuts off the heads or tops of the broomcorn From four to eight inches of the stalk is left with each head The tool used for cutting broomcorn is a MmiairWfUiiSsic ftWtJSF l s - f - 1 31 T iii tT f - If m 1111 iu Bm j d i i an - gggynrrmr ySS fjnLtlxxXSEttitx passports shipmen pretending losses at sea The following inclusion deals di rectly with the subject of actors ill fencers beare wardes common plaj ers in interludes and minstrels not be longing to any baron cf the realme or towards any honourable personage of greater degree which shall wander abroad and have not licenses of two justices of the peace of the least whereof one bee of the quorum where and iu what shire they shall happen to wander The Nineteenth Century A NEW POMPEII Discovered by Excavators on the Site of Ancient PriencJ This title is perhaps an exaggeration The I hut it is certain that if the published cultivating is after the manner of In- reports are true the German dian corn When ready to harvest the ogists who are excavating on the site farmer gathers his force - o1 ancient Priene have made a A man walks between two rows i covery of the highest interest It is well known that rriene is in Asia Mi nor and that the modern city of Sam soun occupies its ancient site Several years ago an English expedition un earthed and studied the temple of Mi nerva the chief sanctuary of the city built by order of Alexander but its ruins although interesting were knife similar to the ordinary shoe doued and they have since been de- knife The breaking of these tables serves two purposes It places the heads in position so thej may be cut off readily and form a place to lay the spoiled by the inhabitants of the neigh borhood In 1S93 the Germans resumed the exploration of the region in behalf of the Berlin Museum at the expense heads Four rows of heads are placed of the Prussian government and under on each table Teams pass through the field -between the table rows and the corn is loaded and hauled to the thrashing place Here it is placed on jlong tables which extend to the seeder iOn these tables it is straightened out and placed on a carrier belt which car ries it through the seeder From the seeder it is carried to a barn or shed prepared with shelving where it is scattered out and left to dry from two to four weeks When sufficiently dry it is placed in bales of 200 to 300 pounds each It requires a large amount of the direction of a young architect helm Wilberg The work of excava tion is rJrcady sufficiently advanced to enable us io judge of its rare impor tance a whole city isbeing unearthed in almost as good preservation as Pom peii And this is the more important because up to the present no similar discovery has ever been made that gives precise indications of the general arrangement of a Greek city of its pub lie monuments or its individual dwell ings The city thus exhumed is as suredly of the period of greatest Greek beauty the streets cross at right an- BROOM CORN HARVESr OF ILLINOIS 3rooTT corn ready fo hanvfcSt1 v tional farm help and coming at a time of the year when the farm work of other kinds is slack a great body of men from the adjoining country flocks to the broomcorn fields The broom manufacturer visits the farmer and purchasers the crop Sometimes he de pends upon a broomcorn broker It is sold by the farmer at so much per ton The price varies from 50 to 100 per ton A ton is the product of from two to three acres In recent years a large part is manufactured in the broom corn belt This broomcorn belt covers but a small part of Illinois It extends from Neoga on the south to Tnscola on the north and from Shelbyville on the west to Paris on the east Broomcorn is not the exclusive crop in this belt for other crops are grown ANCIENT STATUS OF ACTORS They Were Clashed Anions Uojrnes Vagabonds and Sturdy Beggars There is a common idea that actors are by law considered as vagabonds the historic basis being a contempla tion of the statutes regarding vagran cy These statutes crude and general in terms as were all or most of the early enactments having been made and renewed between the twenty third year of Edward III and the fifth year of Queen Elizabeth were variously re pealed and consolidated in 1572 the act being the 14th Eliza both chapter 5 In this act strolling players unlicensed are certainly classed among rogues vagabonds and sturdie beggars who are in the preamble of the act termed outrageous enemies to the common weall the penalty on conviction being that then imraediatelie he or she shall be adjudged to be grievouslie whipped and burnt through the gristle of the right eare with a hot yrou of the com passe of an inch about a punishment only to be abated by some responsible householder taking him or her into service for a full year under proper rec ognizance A second offense became a felony The cause ot tne act expressing what person and persons shall bee so extended within this branch to be rogues vagabonds and sturdie beg gars includes the following Pre tended proctors gamesters persons faining themselves fo have knowledge in phisnomie palmestrie or other abused sciences quasi labourers who will not work unlicensed jugglers ped lars tinkers pettie chapmen counter feetours and users of licenses and w I -- w iiMta t ii nn gles and are laid out with the greatest regularity and we can identify colon nades theaters market places shops and houses with their decorations and interior arrangement South of the temple of Minerva has been found the agora surrounded with great colon nades while opening on one of its cor ners is a small square edifice somewhat resembling a theater and constituting perhaps the place of meeting of the city council It is in admirable preser vation and sixteen rows of seats can be seen still in place Worthy of note is a vault in one of the walls a thing extraordinarily rare in Greek architec ture We should add in closing that among the structures that have been entirely exhumed is a theater whose scene is intact which will doubtless solve some of the problems connected with this special part of the Greek the aters Literary Digest A Fair UntlerstandiiiK A feAv years ago a young man from just across the Connecticut who was tending the village academy became sadly infected with the notion that all the maidens were in love with him While in this state of mind it fell to his lot one evening to see Miss H safely to her fathers domicile On arriving at the door the lady invited him to enter He did so After a few moments con versation he arose to leave and as Miss II was showing him to the door she innocently enough remarked that she would be pleased to see him again Here was an occasion for the exercise of Jonathans courage and moral prin ciple Expanding himself to his tallest height with a graceful but determined inclination of the head he replied I should be happy miss to call as a friend but not as a feller Blaines Grave The grave of James G Blaine at Oak Hill is visited by about thirty persons a day and is unmarked save by a small footstone bearing the initials J G B It is understood among the friends of the Blaine family that the burial at Oak Hill is only temporary and that Mrs Blaine intends to remove the bodies of her husband and children to Au gusta Me as soon as she can make sat isfactory arrangements for their burial there Novels say a terrible lot about the fragrance of the heroines hair con sidering that hair oil has gone out oi style DAUGHTER OF OOuFcDbRACY that there were very many boys who wore married at thirteen and fourteen Ii8s Winnie DaviH Whose Death Car- T nnP SOme at fifteen years had evpru ricd i orrovr Throughout the South j wjves There is a youthf 111 Algerian 111 the death of Miss Yarina Anne j widow of fifteen and a divorced bus Jefferson Davis one popularly known j iint Df the same age Girls are still as Winnie the Southern people lost j more precocious and are sometimes an idol and the nation a most charm 1 innn ied when only eleven years old ing winsome ana intellectual young thouh twelve is tne more usuai n v lady Probably no young woman in the There are 1S9 widows of fifteen and United States was personally known to more people than Miss Davis Certain ly none was more generally admired for her splendid qualities of mind and heart Popular everywhere she was especially beloved by the men who had fought for that Confederacy of which her father was the President Miss Davisillness had extended over a period of two months and developed into sub aente gastritis For years she had made it a point whenever possible to be present at the gatherings of the Confederate veterans and the old sol diers always gave her their heartiest cheers At the reunion in Atlanta last July she and Mrs Stonewall Jackson MISS WIXS1E DAVIS were driving in the parade A storm broke and the ladies were drenched and chilled From this experience dated Miss Davis fatal illness Winnie Davis was the youngest of five children of Jefferson Davis and was born in the Confederate White House in Richmond in the last year of the civil war Tall and fair haired with an oval face and gray blue eyes she was an ideal American woman in appearance She had a sweet Southern voice and a charming manner that proved the gentleness of her disposition She was her fathers favorite child On his deathbed he said she had given him only happiness her mother had often called her the best and dearest of daughters Her devotion to her father in his last years was not more fond than her devotion to her mother after her fathers death Her mother leaned upon her she was her mothers prop As an author Miss Davis wrote sev eral novels good wholesome and en tertaining and from the sale of these she enjoyed a handsome income Always surrounded by admirers she never married A few years ago her engagement was announced but it is said she could not bring herself to give up her beloved fathers name Miss Davis has for years been called the Daughter of the Confederacy This affectionate title was conferred in the following manner In 1SSG Jefferson Davis was making a tour of the Southern States Every where he was greeted by cheering thousands YThen West Point Ga was reached Mr Davis was so ill that he could not leave his berth General Gordon went upon the rear platform of the train and explained to the 000 as sembled people that Mr Davis could not appgarTurning he found Miss Yvinnie Davis at his elbow Throwing his arms about her Gen Gordon cried out Countrymen your late President cannot come out to see you but here is his daughter our daughter the daugh ter of the Confederacy The multi tude went wild with enthusiasm and since that time Miss Davis has always been referred to in the South with the utmost affection as the daughter of the Confederacy A FAST LOCOMOTIVE Runs Kijrhts two 3Iilc3 an Hour on Small Fuel Consumption Three hours from New York to Washington is the record which the Baltimore and Ohio expects soon to es tablish by the use of a newly invented locomotive This engine has been tested on the Erie road between Port Jervis and Jersey City a distance of eighty eight miles which it covered in an hour and twelve minutes including seven minutes for stops It weighs Asiifflij Tt inui rr rj lli uatsttni itir JUJMQQQQ dD TIIK 21AUB KXCIVE iixty two tons has eight sixty-two-inch drivers and consumes less fuel and draws more cars than any other locomotive on the track By an ar rangement of the boiler Hues what has hitherto been waste product of com bustion is used as fuel The smoke stack is merely an outlet for exhaust steam for it never emits smoke or sparks The record between Port Jer vis and lersey Cityis vouched for by the engineer who made the trip The Baltimore and Ohio is to be equipped with these engines as fast as they can be built Early Ularriages The farther south one goes the ear lier one finds marriages take place A census was lately taken in Algeria and It was found that the youngest Arab married man was twelve years old and 117G divorces of the same age HE LIVES WITH HIS SNAKES A Gatskill Mountaineer Who Prefers Kcptiles to Wife and Child Up in the Catskills lives one of those men who have an affinity for snakes He prefers the companionship of any kind of reptile to that of the most genial nfan or fascinating woinaiu Wherever he goes he carries with him several of these pets and on several occasions has sent women into hyster ics and made men nervous and angry by taking from his pocket a shining black snake or poisonous copperhead The Benedicts Lament Backward turn backward O Time in- your flight Make me a bach again just for to night Fix it so that I may come home once more Without catching fits as I enter the door Take from my neck the sad yoke thatll wear Oh let me come in without losing my hair The boys have invited me down to the club But Time wont turn backward and is the rub Chicago Xews and fondling it tenderly In a moment of abstraction from hisj devotion to snakes he asked a woman to marry him and for some iucompre hensible reason she consented It was not long however until she began tc make objection to the numerous rep tiles which the snake lover insisted om bringing into the house Trouble began and continued The sjmpathy of the neighbors was with the wife They advised her to leave a man who could be little better than a snake himself to subject her to such indignities She bore it until there was a baby in the family Then the fond father took to wheeling the baby out in its peram bulator and bringing it back surround ed by snakes This was too much fo2 the mother and she left the snake coh lector for good and all Xo one wanted to rent him a houset so he bought a little place of his owe and lives alone with his snakes Th6 villagers give the house a Avide berth and the summer visitors hasten th other way when they see him coming down the street with a snake coiled about his neck Oh yes is a beautiful place said a girl who had just returned home from a two weeks visit there but 1 wouldnt go again as long as thai snake man lives there He says th horrid things are harmless as if thai made any difference The only com pensation is that he has collected sc manj of the miserable things thai there are fewer about the cotmtrj than there would be otherwise Xe York Press NEW CUBAN SHIELD Coat of Arras Adopted By the Insur gent Government of the Island Cubas new coat of arms is an in foresting design symbolizing all thaj is important in the liberated country There is a cap of liberty with the single white star of Cuba surmounting a bundle of fasces meaning authority and power before which rests a shield on one side of which is a wreath of oak leaves on the other a wreath of laurel The sunrise of a new prosperity is ris ing over the sea lighting up a bay into which commerce will soon stream The key symbolizes Cuba itself which has been called the key of the West In dies The right half of the shield pic tures a tropical palm the fertile val leys and sunny hills of the island indi f i mm AmmW Cubas coat of aums eating agriculture and the red and white bars on the left may possibly be intended as a compliment to the United States for the part this countrj played in the liberation of the island Alto gether it is a pretty design though probably too complex Largest Hotel in the Worlrt The Sultan is said to have nearly com pleted the largest hotel in the world at Mecca This establishment is to lodger 0000 pilgrims at once with presum j ably their camels and other beasts of burden and promises to be one of thti most picturesque places to stay ni in the world although of course infideP dogs are not allowed to approach it Great Britains Expends The expenses of Great Britain arer now about 300000000 yearly or nonr ly 1000 per minute but every tide of the cloek represents an inflow of a little over 10 in the Treasury thus leaving an annual surplus of about 20000COO Irelawtis Antiquaries This year the Boyal Society of AntiT quaries of Ireland celebrates its fiftieth anniversary It was founded in Kill kenny and now numbers on its rolj 1400 fellows and members in every part of the globe r T A f x J 111