Tbe Plattsmoutti Journal G. B. MASS, W. K. FOX, Publishers. PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA The March for frozen birds in a New York city cold storage house, made by the state game inspector, Is ended, and It appears that In its course nearly 49. 000 birds, were discovered, all of which. It Is alleged, were killed out of season. Criminal and civil actions are to be brought at once against several persons. Eugene Field's first poem was dis covered recently In the possession of Edgar White, a court stenographer at Macon. Mo. It is entitled 'Bucephalus, a Ttall." and is believed to have been written by the author In 1S71, when he was a student in the state univer sity. H. W. Burke, a SL Joseph jus tice of the peace, who worked with Field on the old St. Joseph Gazette, has pronounced tbe poem genuine. The Pullman company is arranging to establish a pension system for its entire force of employes, numbering between 12.000 and 15.000 persons. Six ty years will be made the limit of ser vice. For each year an allowance of 1 per cent of the average monthly pay for the last ten months Is to be given. Thus, employes who have been with the company forty years, receiving $50 a month, would get 40 per cent of $50. or $20 a month. Tradition asserts that the Queen of Sheba gave Solomon an intricately pierced stone to thread. He solved the problem by forcing a worm, dragging a thread, to crawl through the winding pas.-jage. The modern version is on a maniSed scale. To test the riht of Chicago to call itse!f a seaport, the steamer Northman, loaded with west ern grain, timber and machinery, has made the voyage from Chicago to Hamburg by way of the Great Lakes and the Welland canal. The white thread of her wake can harly fail to weave new nd important pattern into the maritime commerce of nations. A patriotic New Yorker, a member of the Sons of the Revolution, is pre paring to give to each of the public school buildings of New York city, a copy cf colossal size, of the famous Houdon bust of Washington. The model, made by Wilson MacDonald. one of the oldest sculptors In America, has already been accepted. The pub lic spirited donor believes that love of country ehou!d be taught In the schools and that there is no better way of teaching it than by keeping the mem ory of the greatest patriots fresh In the irinds of the pupils. Naturally the Father of his country comes first. An Indianapolis correspondent calls attention to the part played by the telephone In a recent divorce case at Noblesvllle, Ind. A Mrs. Nagle brought suit for divorce. On the day appointed for the trial her attorney, Mr. Fippn, could not attend, and called up the Noblesvllle judge and explained the circumstances, suggesting that the case be tried by telephone. The jucge consented the witnesses were sworn, and in answer to questions asked them by Mr. Fippen, thirty miles away, sub mitted their testimony to the Judge, after which Mr. Fippen delivered his argument, talking into the judge's ear by telephone. The divorce was grant ed. Dr. N. S. Davis, of Chicago. I3 called the father of the American medjeal association, for it was in 1845. whi!ie a member of the New York state medi cal society, that he offered a resolution recommending that a national conven tion, representing all the medical soci eties and colleges in the country, be held In New York city In May. 1846. The purpose was to be the adoption of a concerted plan of action for the ele vation of the standard of medical edu cation in the United States. The con vention resulted in the formation) of the American medical society. Dr. Davis is S5 years old. and has been a icsident of Chicago since 1S43. The remarks against kissing attrib uted to Professor Crook of Chicago, prompted B. B. Wilson, a merchant cf Mount Hope. Kan., to form an anti kissing league. A dozen married men were persuaded to become members. The wife of Secretary T. J. Cox. of the league, has revolted and Is suing for divorce, after three weeks without kiss ing, but Cox boasts he has not kissed his wife in many years, maintaining that it is unmanly. The pledge one has to take to join the league is that he will kiss no woman, no matter if she Is his wife. "Kissing is for women only the weaker sex." Wilson says. "Kissing Is a weak manner of show ing affection. We love our wives more than those men who are all the time kissing them every time they leave the house. Some wives may object, but that will not induce us to desert the cause. My wife Is in favor of the plan and looks at it in the same manner as 1 do." Paul Wayland Bartlett, the sculptor. who has established his studio in one of the eastern suburbs of Washington, has received a letter from the French government accepting his statue of La fayette, which is the gift to France of 5.000.000 American school children. Mr. Bartlett's design was the success ful one before the American jury, and he was required by the French gov ernment to erect his statue in plaster on the site allotted for it in the court cf the Louvre, where the French jury Cnal!y passed on it. The Georgia Agricultural works at Fort Va'.ley has Jut shipped to far away Greece a complete ginning outfit, consisting cf a 60-saw Centennial cot ton gin. feeder and condenser. This is but the first installment of several gin outfits to be shipped to Greece and other foreign countries. Dr. A. P. Grinnel of Burlington, de clares that over three million doses of opium are sold at Vermont every, month to habitual narcotic users. His figures were the result of an official Investigation. t3 Milkweed (y nfcAVr r Thousands of beautiful rosy stars Came tumbling uown rrotn the sky. And dear latne June he gathered them uy In a clustering family. The nun fell hot. and the world was stranjee To the little frightened things. 1'ntll August came to enfold them With a pair of sheltering wings. You will shine again with brighter rays. Sweet wanderers from the sklea: The days are bringing you sure reward In a wonderful surprise. For Autumn carries the magic key To unlock a milkweed pod. And thousands of starry angels wl.l Fly back to their home with Ood. An Effect in Rosemary. BY ELIZABETH CHERRY WALTZ. Author "The Spread of Fire." (Copyright. 1301. by Dally Story Pub. Co.) The maid tied the last knot of rib bon and adjusted the last fold of gauze. Contrary to custom they were a quar ter of an hour too early. Milly Ellis, on the programs Mls3 Millicent Devereaux, laughed a little sarcastically. "No flowers? We are. Indeed. In a stranee land. Run out the call boy anybody there Is yet time. There should be a florist near." "And the flowers, madame, what shall they be?" A second's thought, then a rush of memory. For the sake of the past, Milly Ellis said, hastily: "Lilacs white or purple. There will be plenty this time of the year. See. they will suit my gown!" The maid snatched a cloak from the wall. "I will go myself. I will not trust a youth. It Is a matter of taste." Then Miss Devereaux went up the steps that led to the green room and to the stage In front. She wished to see the audience before the play be gan. She walked slowly and haughtily through the laughing. Inpatient throng of chorus girls and villagers and took refuge In the wings until she saw an opening in the curtains through which she could look. There was a sea of faces, a-great audience, but nowhere one familiar face, although Milly Ellis had been born and grew up In this great city and now returned to It, the star of an opera troupe. The bran new chandelier of electric lights threw its beams over the clean paint and gay draperies of the sum mer theater. There were rows upon rows of heads and faceB, but nothing familiar to respond to the fond long ing In her heart. A voice sounded beside her. "A great audience a real triumph and you are quite at your best to night. Miss Devereaux." Beside her, bowing low enough, was the new tenor. "Surely a success but perhaps Miss Devereaux will accept the flowers she can so well carry in the ballroom scene." He held a splendid armful of hot house roses, red and glowing. Miss Devereaux flushed somewhat angrily. It would not be politic to refuse. "I will carry them in the one scene," she said coldly." but they are too sumptuous for the village maid. I must wear or carry a simpler flower with this gown." In the wines Felice waited with an odorous bunch, white lilacs with the most delicate perfume, with the subtle wood scent, with the message of eter nal hope of springtime. "Thank God. there is something left," whispered the woman3 heart, "something sweet and unchanged." She stood apart with the flowers on her breast until her call, stood ab sorbed in the dreams of an old house In the grove, of flashing waters, of old and gnarly lilac bushes, of silent stretches of field and meadow, of peace for Milly Ellis, with her clear bird voice, had been only a simple country maiden ere she went away to learn to sing. ! Gone were the days of her training, her struggle in grim New York; van ished the Faris life where her voice "Lilacs white and purple." had been perfected; like a d-eam were the tours in small Italian towns to test her powers and to become confident in her work. Gone, gone, nothing left, nothing worth while save the spring mornings in front of an old wooden house in a grove, the odor of lilacs, the calls of birds answering her own clear notes, mild and sweet beyond belief. No one knew for she was iver re served as to her personality. No one knew that tonight she sang before her home audience. It was twelve years, and a girl is forgotten in twelve years, when her friends have passed away into the silence of the hereafter. She went onto the stage with a pen sive loveliness in her face and when she sang there were those tears In her voice that she dared not shed, the tears of the heart for the days that were gone. A girl again in her simple gauze gown and hanging hair, she carried away her audience because she seemed one with them. In the ballroom scene she was alien to the time and place. They resented the attitude, the hour, the glowing crimson roses. Breathless ly they watched the mimic escape as a gypsy girl longing for her home. Joy ously saw her return to her wlldwood haunts and her lover. Then the audi ence rose in applause, and tbe hour of a great triumph had truly come to Milly Ellis. Her heart swelled when she went, with her jubilant manager, before the curtains. She longed to cry out: I am little Milly Ellis, who was born and brought up here, obscure enough among you and now now I have conquered you all!" But even in that hour there was to be something beside. As she bowed and smiled, speechless In her deep emotion, a slender tongue of flame leaped from above In one of the wings, and caught a swaying gilded banneret. And. in the next second, hoarse cries of "Fire!" were here and there and wild screams of terror. In a breath the woman was forgotten in the fear of death. The manager flew from her side to the rear, commanding, half mad with this sudden change of fortune. But the fire leapt, like a thing of life, from one flimsy ornament and drapery to an other and the opening doors fanned the flames. In that moment when the manager left her alone, Milly Ellis stood sud denly stripped of all she had held most dear, stood alone and saw a mad fight "John Crompton!" she exclaimed. for life begin. Where now was the dashing tenor whose burning eyes had so lately pursued her own? Where now the fickle admirers of the past and present? She stood alone and the fire demon ran above her and dropped down upon her gauze draperies, burn ing gegaws which had glittered and shone but a moment before. She in vited destruction, she stood alone. In that desperate moment, a deep voice said: "Come with me at once! ' A heavy wrapping, the curtain of one of the boxes, was twined about her. She was fairly whirled off her feet by the impetuosity of a race across the stage and a plunge and jump into the orchestra box. Half dragged, half run ning, the singer was urged on until she stood in the alleyway back of the the ater, and knew she was safe. But it was dark and she heard the rattle of the engines coming. Holding to her rescuer's arm. they ran to a side street and at last sank down on the stone steps of a church. As they lay there panting the very heavens lit up. The theater was doomed. In the lurid light Milly Ellis looked at her rescuer. He was tall and broad and she knew his strength. As he sat still, breathing heavily, memory strug gled within her to formulate a name, a remembrance. She leaned forward and when the heavy drapery fell away, she smelled the white lilacs. "John Crompton!" she exclaimed. "John Crompton! And you have saved me?" "Everyone else deserted you." he said, "so I came to you." She deserved the words. Years be fore she had despised his friendship and expostulations against her career. "It was death," she whispered fear fully, "it was death!" "A short enough triumph for you." he sa d, more kindly, "the triumph of a few moments. Still, It may satisfy you your art may still be more to you than friendship, love, and even life." But she caught his arm and clung to him. "After this? After I have learned what art means how cruel it is how art is nothing to life? O John, my heart has been aching all day for the old time when I could be happy." For answer he wrapped the red dra pery about her and over her fallen hair. "You are not so changed." he said. There was a note of tenderness In his voice. "But you? What has come to you. John? You are different." "I am a man." he said, and as he spoke the lurid light fell upon his face. "I am a man now, and I claim a man's heritage. I would share no one with art. I must have all or nothing. You know me of old." She knew him. He had not ap proached her or written her for years. "And you have waited all this time?" "I cared for no one else." The immensity of the feeling she had long ago awakened struck at the door of her heart. She clutched at his hand. She wet It with her tears. "It was art or life." she said, broken ly, "and life won, John, life has won." BadgM of the Sooth anrl Went. It is not difficult to tell by their clothes from which section of the country senators hail. Perhaps not so much by their clothes as the way they wear them, one should say, to be ac curate. All the string ties, for In stance, come from the west and south. Eastern senators wear stylish scarfs almost without exception. Eastern senators button their frock3 and cut aways; westerners and southerners leave them open. The western and southern members have low-cut vests, usually with one or two buttons un buttoned. Two finely groomed sena tors are Piatt and Depew, whose clothes are made by the best tailors in New York and London. Where will you find a more neatly dressed man than Aldrich of Rhode Island? And Wetmore one of the 400? His clothes cost him the larger part of his salary. New York Press. Satin boleros In ivory or cream white are one of the features of the season. HISTORIC TREES. Washington Has Many That Wer Planned by Famous Americans. It was the custom of the late Charles A. Dana to visit this city occasionally, writes a Washington correspondent of the New York Times, and to spend the entire day that he gave to sight-seeing In looking over the trees of the city with William R. Smith, in charge of the botanical gardens. Mr. Dana said of Mr. Smith that he knew more about trees than any half-dozen men of Mr. Dana's acquaintance. Mr. Smith has in his gardens a number of his torically interesting trees. There is a Kentucky oak grown from an acorn planted by John J. Crittenden, and a story goes with this information about the intimacy that existed between Crittenden, Robert Mallory and John A. Bingham of Ohio. Not far from the elm grown from one planted by George Washington at the time he laid the corner-stone of the capitol. Work men killed the tree while excavating for the architectural terrace at the west front. Mr. Smith propagated the new elm from the old roots, and the new tree was planted where It is by Senator James B. Beck of. Kentucky. While Jefferson Davis was secretary of war his wife gave Mr. Smith some seed of the Monterey cypress, from which was produced a fine specimen near the end of the greenhouse. To specimens of the bald variety of cyp ress are named "Forney" and "For rest." one planted by John W. Forney, an editor, and the other by Edwin For rest, the actor, 35 years ago. A Chin ese tree was grown from seed obtained at the grave of Confucius, and was pre sented to the garden by Charles A. Dana and planted by Representative Amos J. Cummings fifteen years ago. Among other well known tree planters who have left their names are Thad deus Stevens, the late Senator Bayard, who planted an English oak; Proctor Knott. Daniel W. Voorhees, J. S. C. Blackburn. Lot M. Morrill and Justin S. Morrill, who planted winged elms thirty years ago; Senator Hoar and Senator Evarts. and some more recent arrivals in Washington. There is a Carolina poplar that is Interesting as the parent of S0.000 other poplars, liv ing in many states of the Union. STRANGE IMPS IN THE SEA. Cspt. Moody Caught One OfT Cape Charles Uchthlp. Capt. William Moody of Baltimore believes there are strange imps in the tea. because he caight one recently while fishing off Cape Charles light ship. Capt. Moody is commander of the lightship, and it is his habit to keep a baited hook, attached to an ex tremely long line in the water at all times. Occasionally this persistency 1s rewarded with cod or other tooth some fish of deep water. The captain happened to be near the line when the "imp" fish was hooked. He started to pull it in, and then ensued as pretty a battle as ever warmed the heart of fisherman. Several times the creature was brought to the surface, and on one occasion it leaped ten feet in the air. After a battle lasting fully an hour the monster was harpooned and pulled on deck. The fish weighed about eighty pounds. The "imp" ha3 wings, which are of the thickness of sailcloth, and are mottled with blue checks or squares. The mouth is filled with par allel rows of conical teeth, the rows varying from two, in the back part of the upper jaw. to eight in front, with twice these numbers In the lower jaw. The tail has three rows of spines, re sembling the teeth running its whole length. The "imp" has no scales, creature has been shown to govern ment experts, but as yet remains un classified. Horses Fear Papfr. "Odd isn't it," said an old horseman, "but a piece of white paper biowing under a horse's feet will scare him when nothing else under the sun will make him bat an eye. "There are old dray horses In this town that would go on eating out of a nosebag if the crack of doom should Eound in the street. There are hun dreds of them that would not wink if a circus procession and seven bands came by. A tugboat might plow up in the river not SO feet away and they wouldn't try to dodge th2 boiler-plate. "But you can't trust one team in a thousand to stand for the half of a newspaper to come blowing under taeir itret. "Why is it? I don't know. If a horse has any 'bolt left in him he will go at that. The automobile and the trolley that are new to him don't feaze him, but the scrap of paper, which has been with us for generations, will frighten him into a fit." "Bnffalo Bill's Amiable Weakness. "Buffalo Bill" once allowed himself to be put to shame by failing to shoot a couple of deer at an easy distance. "Every one has hi3 little weakness," he exclaimed; "mine is a deer's eye. I don't want you to say anything about it to your friends, for they would laugh more than ever, but the fact is I have never yet been able to shoot a deer if it looked me In the eye. With a buf falo or a bear or an Indian It is differ ent. But the deer has tho eye of a trusting child soft, gentle and confid ing. No one but a brute could shoot a deer If he caught that look." Negro and White Marriages. During the past five years there has been a decided increase in the number of marriages In New York between white and colored people. In 1895 there were 729 such marriages. 369 negroes having married white women and 360 colored women having married to white men. Last year there were 1. 846, in which 920 negro women were married to white men and 926 negroes married white women. Expedition to -Stn ly Fish, The German Antarctic expedition, which will start for Kerguelen island in a few months, will give special at tention to the study of sea life and Its economic aspects. None of the useful varieties of fish is yet known to exist in Antarctic waters. Mme. Lehmann Is said to be anxious to make a concert tour of this country next season. At her recent appearance in Germany her voice was unusually fresh and mellow. SILKS VERY CHEAP. WE ARE GAINING IN THE WORLD'S MARKET. Wonderful DeTelopmsnt of tbe Industry Here from a Few Hand-Loom Faa torlrs In New England New We're Seeking- Markets Abroad. Almost the poorest woman In this nation may wear a silk gown in these iays, and that, as Minister Wu Ting fang told the silk merchants of Am erica here some few months ago, is not the case even In China, the homo of silken gowns. Never before were women's silk dress materials so cheap as they are now. Never were satins, velvets, plushes, ribbons and sewing silks at so low a price In pro portion to quality as at present. Silk3 both of domestic and foreign weaving, are being sold in the retail stores in all the principal cities of this country at prices below the cost of manufactur ing. Never before have artists tried so zealously in producing the creations which women can make such dreams of delight and never before have the prices been so irresistible to the femi nine heart. It Is all due to the rise of the United States among the silkweaving nations of the world, a rise so rapid and so Irresiitible that the two dis tinguished Swieg manufacturers one of them the largest in the world who served on the Jury which awarded the Paris exposition silk prizes were moved in their report to the govern ment to call attention to the swiftly increasing competition of the American weavers in the markets of the world and to predict nothing but disaster to European competitors from it. Silk goods of our own manufacture are rap idly monopolizing the domestic market and now are also finding an outlet abroad. No other country, the manu facturers agree, is now so well equip ped as ours for the low-priced produc tion of silk goods, so great has been the improvement in power loom mak ing here, and now, though the condi tions have not been favorable in the main either to labor or capital in the silk industry in the last two years. American manufacturers are supplying at least 75 per cent, of the silk fabrics in the domestic market and in ribbons are making actually 90 per cent of the supply. When the silk Industry was started In this country in the early forties It seemed to have poor prospects. By long acquaintance with silk weaving the French, English, Swiss and Italian manufacturers bad every advantage over the budding in dustry. It has been American me chanical genius which has pulled the industry here out of the hole. "The best factory gets the most work." is an axiom in the silk trade and Ameri can manufacturers get to work to make theirs the best factories. In 1875 there were 1,605 looms, and all hand looms at that In this country. In 1880 there were 3.153 hand looms double the number and there were also 5.321 power looms, turning out silk fabrics at double speed. In 1S90 the number had increased to 20,822 power looms, and 1.747 hand looms. Last year, there were 30,000 power looms on broad goods alone and 7,000 more power looms were turning out rib bons. The use of hand looms had dropped till there were only 830 of them, and of these 130 were turning out specialties In narrow trimmings. The Silk Association of America in its annual report issued a few weeks ago estimated the value of the product of the silk looms of this country in the last year at $100,000,000. More than 500 factories were turning out this pro duct in every state in the union be tween Maine and Delaware. In 1S50 a few small factories in Connecticut were turning out the whole product of the industry here and it was valued at less than $2,000,000. In New Jersey alone last year there was $30,000,000 capital invested in the silk business and al most as much in Pennsylvania; 44.230 operatives were employed in the two states, drawing $13,500,000 in wages, and in the whole country there were nearly 64,000 operatives who earned more than $20,000,000. Other weaving industries. In which silk is largely used half as many more men, women and children were employed and half as much capital again was invested. Yet the silk industry is passing through a crisis Just now and its difficulties have oeen the ill wind which has blown good to the consumers alone. The United States In the last two years has imported one-third of the world's sup ply of raw silk, but at an increased price and under the competition of rival mills equipped with highly pro ductive machinery the market for the finished goods has stayed down. That is why silks are cheap here and per sons of moderate Incomes benefit thereby, while foreign manufacturers year by year see themselves outbid and outclassed In what was one one of their most profitable markets. Harvesting- by Installments. A farmer in Barton county, Kan., last year carried Into successful opera tion a plan by which outside help was done away with. He had two grown sons, and in September they com menced sowing wheat. This was kept up, planting a hundred acres every month until January. In May his first crop was ready to harvest, and in September he was Just rounding out his harvest and started in to planting; again. Thus he and his sons handled the entire crop of 500 acres and were employed the year around. He saved the expense of twenty hands and his wheat crop netted him $700 clear money. St. Louis Republic. An Ancient Vase. During excavations near Lampsak!. on the Dardanelles, a beautiful vase was found. It is made of burnt clay, encrusted on the exterior with gold. It has three golden handles and splen did reliefs representing hunling scenes. The date of the vase, which contained human ashes, bones and pearls, is esti mated at about B. C. 400. A white pine tree twenty years old ought to be about 25 feet high and at 30 or 40 years of age it ought to meas ure about 60 feet. NATIVE INDIAN SURVEYORS. Strategy Necessary la Vlag Measuring Instruments in Thibet. At any time within the last thirty live years the trans-Himalayan travel er might have met a caravan of Thi betan and Indian traders with their pack-laden sheep climbing or descend ing some steep mountain pass or cross ing the Tsangpo on rafts. Walking humbly with the servants or slaves for to walk 13 a mark of servitude with those people there woitfd be an In dian with tea bowl and prayer barrel suspended at his girdle, counting his rosary as he walked, differing in noth ing apparently from his companions except in his more intelligent face and in the greater interest with which he noted everything about him. But open his prayer barrel, which he piously twirls when he comes to some par ticularly dangerous spot, and there will be found in it instead of a scroll with the Budhist prayer. "Om manl pad mi hom notes of the Journey after the boundary was crossed, observations with sextant and compass, and a sim ple route survey showing the length of each days march, the relative posl- tion of the prominent peaka, the course of the streams and their ap proximate breadth and depth. It was In 1861 that the successful opposition of the Thibetans to the exploration of the trans-Himalayan region by Euro peans, as well as the fact that Indian traders were permitted to travel freely throughout Thibet, suggested to an of ficer connected with the great trigono metrical survey of India the expedient of employing native surveyors. The village schoolmaster, Nain Singh, who had been In the service of the broth ers Schlaginweit during their explor ations in Kashmir, was the first man to receive the necessary training for the work. At the headquarters of the survey he was taught the use ,of the sextant, compass, etc., to recognize all the larger stars and to make a simple route survey. When these things had been sufficiently acquired he wa3 sent to explore the Tsangpo from its source to India, If possible. It was 1863 before he succeeded in establishing himself in Thibet as a trader desiring to buy horses and at the same time as a pious Buddhist to do homage to the Lhaa Lama. His "instrumental equipment consisted of a large sextant, two box sextants, prismatic and pocket com pass, thermometer for observing tem perature of air and of boiling water, pecket chronometer and common watch, with apparatus, the latter re duced as much as possible." CRIMINALS ARE EXPENSIVE. Country Could SttTO Meney by Glvlnc Them Biff Petitions. Criminals are very expensive mem bers of the community. They cost the people of the country about $1,000,000. 000 a year. If their increase could be prevented it would be a paying In vestment to give each of the 250,000 accepted criminals a monthly pension of $300, on the condition that they take a life vacation from the strenu ous demands of their profession. The average annual income of professional criminals is estimated at about $1,600. This means that the community pays them a yearly salary of $400,000,000. After this is spent for their mainten ance, we pay annually $200,000,000 for their detection, conviction, and sup port, under national, state, county, and city auspices. The urban popula tion has to pay the larger share of this, or 30.000.000 people in cities have to pay $105.000.000 $3.50 per cap ita, and the suburban population of 45.000.0C0 $1 each, or $45,000,000. In addition to this there Is a federal and state expense of $50,000,000. Add to this the loss by malicious destruction of property the money value of human life lost through crime, the expendi ture necessary In the attempt to guard against loss through lawbreakers, and we find that $1,000,000,000 is not a large estimate. Chicago Journal. Towers Which Lean. The famous leaning tower of Pisa 18 by 110 means tbe only building which by accident or design Is far out of the perpendicular. Some are more or less well known in Britain. The Tem ple church at Bristol, Eng., which, al though quite intact and faultless with respect to architectural design, leans very conspicuously. The church at Ermington, South Devon, affords an instance of a spire which is curiously curved; but. although appearing to be in a dangerous state, it Is perfectly stable and safe. The very curious twisted spire at Chesterfield Is prob ably better known than any In Britain, for one of the main lines of railway passes close to It. and the appearance of the building Is quite enough to pro voke remark. The deformity is at tributed to the fact that the builder of the spire used green wood, which warped with the heat of the sun and twisted the erection into its present corkscrew shape. The historic Monu ment of London, which was built by Wren to commemorate the great fire of 1666, not only slopes many feet from an upright position, but swings in the wind on breezy days. Art Treasures In the Far West. Another of the remarkable dis patches concerning works of art, which come out of the west, with such start ling frequency nowadays, brings word that in a fire In a church built by Pere Marquette in 1669 there has perished a painting by Rubens. "The Descent from the Cros3." These wonderful Lochinvar dispatches would indicate by their number that the great west is a very storehouse of art treasures. It would be difficult to convince peo ple in the east of the authenticity of many of the discoveries in art there so continuously being made. The last dispatch says the Rubens was given to Marquette by the pope. It were wonderful, indeed, if one of the Flem ish painter's masterpieces was sent from Rome to the Indian missions in the western wilds of the seventeenth century. The carriers of it must have had a nice time, considering the canoe progress, the portage, and the neces sary concern with their environment of savagery. New York Sun. The handorgan man has an airy way, although his life is one contin ual grind. Her Laudable Ambition. Colonel G. B. M. Harvey, the pub lisher, tells of meeting the young bride of a well known Kentucky fam ily, who said: "I'm glad to meet you, because I'm thinking of writing a. book." "Of what sore?" asked the colonel. "Oh," was the answer, "something like 'Lea Miserables only more lively." How He Headed Oft Sharpshooters. William K. Vanderbllt. Jr.. does not Intend that Idle Hour, his new home at Oakland, L. I., shall be photo graphed without his permission. He has accordingly had pictures taken from every possible point and copy righted the results. Couldn't Work lllm for a "Temple." A civil engineer employed In Salt Lake City received recently from the cashier at the works at which he had been engaged his first week's wages,, less 10 per cent. He asked why, hav ing worked a full week at agreed rate, there should be any deduction. "It's the tithe for the Temple," was. the answer, and on further inquiry it appeared that it was usual in Salt Lake City for every citizen cr work man to pay over to the elders a sum representing a tithe, or 10 per cent oT' his earnings or gains. Tho engineer said that he knew nothing about the Temple or the elders, anu that ha cared less. He added that he would have his full pay or know the reason why. "Oh. It's entirely optional," said the cashier, pushing over the bal ance. Woiderful (' In Indiana. Buck Creek, Ind., July 15th Mrs Elizabeth Rorick of this place had' Rheumatism. She says: "All the doc tors told me they could do nothing for me." She was very, very bad, and. the pain was so great she could not 6leep at night. She used Dodd's Kidney Pills, and she is well and entirely free from pain, or any symptom of the Rheumatism. "Are you still using Dodd's Kidney Pills?" was asked. "No, I stopped the use of the Pills some time ago, and have not had the slightest return of my old trouble. I am sure I am completely and perma nently cured." Many in Tippecanoe County who have heard of Mrs. Rorlck's case and her cure by Dodd's Kidney Pills, a:j using the Fills, and all report won derful results. Koyal I'lstol Shot. King George of Greece has lately taken up pistol practice as an amuse ment and is developing a considerable talent in that direction, to that he was able in a recent tournament to defeat some of the best shots in the kingdom. Are Ton Cslnr Allen's Font FaseT It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting. Burning. Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. Aek for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad dress. Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. Teach your child to hold his tongue; he'll learn to speak fast enough. Clear white clothes are a sign that tho housekeeper uses Hwl 1'rons Hall Blue Large 2 oz. package. S cents. An innocent plowman Is more worthy than a vicious prince. Mrs. Windows of hingr yrop. f'orchtldren twt'n soften the stuns, reduces iv fisoii:auou, allsjr pa.n.cure. wladcollc iiic a bottie- Do good to thy friend to keep him to thy enemy to gain him. Ask your grocer for DEFIANCET STARCH, the only 1C oz. package for 10 cents. All other 10-cent starch con tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran teed or money refunded. Seminole War Peimlooers. In the Masonic home in Walling ford. Conn., there resides one of the four veterans now alive of the Sem inole war. He is Charles Benedict, an old Mason. He is on the list of Nncle Sam's pensioners. Two other surviv ors of the war, and all on the pen sion roll, are Samuel Hart, of Rock port. Mass., and Samuel 1. Calkins, of Norwich. NEW EOl'IPMKNr IOK THE WAIIASH. Effective July 10th. The Wabash I placing the first of the large order of equipment, consisting of twe baggage, 8 combination pasenger ard baggage, 30 coaches, 10 chair cars, 3 cafe cars, and 2 dining cars Into service. The trains running from Chicago leaving at 11:00 a. m., 3:03 p. m., 9:15 p. m. and 11:00 p. m., respectively, will carry this new equipment. Much comment has been made upon the elegant Droaa vestibule chair cars in this service. In addition to this extra equipment, tho Pan-American Special, running be tween St. Louis and Buffalo leaves St. Louis at 1:00 p. m., arriving at Buffalo 8:20 a. m. Returning, leaves Buffalo 1:30 p. m., arrives St. Louis 7:56 a. m. This train has been equipped with th large broad vestibule chair cars and cafe library and observation carsj something entirely new, aa innovation in the passenger service. Busephalus, the horse cf Alexander, hath as lasting fame as his master. FRAGRANT a pirfict liquid dentifrice for !h Tooth and Pouth New Size SOZODONT LltJUID, 25c S0Z0DONTT00TH POWDER, ZSc Urge LIQUID and POWDER, 75c 25 c At all Stores, or by Mail for the price. HALL & RUCKEL, New York. FREE l FaTUM. 41 Tratwt of Dr. O. tkl,-i. R.n.n't l.rcil Bi-B'.eCf tut CrtW TTMil..w .11 ftJVr..t niaS'!. AdrWct O. rilliLF B&OW. fc Broadway, "-fThcmpscn's Eye WafsT Vhco Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Taper. W.N. U OA1AHA No. 39 1901 it Conch Syrup. Tsstas Oood. list I I In tlms. Sold brfl' Ists. I f