' FIXBLISHBD BY . ALLIANCE FIB. CO. THE LINCOLN, - NEBRASKA. The month of May in England in 1889 w ill probably t ake rank as the wettest on record. CAX-vrx: S. , Beice has been elected chairman of the national democratic committee. The Vatican has decided that the as tronomical observatory is to be begun at once at an estimated cost of L.000, 000 francs. Ttfns. Custv widow of the General, will spend the summer at her cottage in Pennsylvania, where she will write another book. Many well-informed persons refuse utterly to believe the report that a castor-oil trust w actually organized. They simply declare it will not go down. . The condition of spring wheat in Ne braska is estimated at ninety-eight per cent, which is higher than any state in the country. Score first place for Ne braska. ... It is declared that the price of cof fee will ultimately rise to a point that will check consumption. This will be joyful news, indeed, to those who suffer from weak lungs. Kansas expects to harvest thirty- four million bushels of wheat thii year, the largest crop in the history of the state. The condition of the growing grain is unusually fine. Dii. Hamilton, surgeon general of the army, who went to Johnstown in has returned to Washington ardreports -that in his opinion there is" ho danger of an epidemic. On the 26th of this month a conven tion of business men from every county in Nebraska will be held at the board of trade hall, Omaha, for the purpose of devising ways and means of inducing immigration and otherwise advancing the interests of Nebraska. Stockholders of the Western Union Telegraph company will have no rea son to complain with the annual divid ends soon to be declared. The gross earnings re the largest in the history of the company, and approximate twenty millions. Gekeeal Master Workman Pow derly has issued an appeal to the as sembies of. theKnights of. Labor to -contribute to the relief of; the Johns town suf f erres. The appeal should not fall v?Tnn loaf -ttaroi-, ' : A call for a territorial convention has been issued signed by Mayor Dyer and " committee of citizens of Okla homa. The convention is to begin at Guthrie Wednesday, July 17. The growth ox. Russia s naval power on the Black sea is marked. Besides an addition to her fleet already under way she has just ordered three im- mn3 iroDclads of 11,000 tons, .12,000 horsepower, and six heavy guns. Goverxor Hill, of New York, has signed th? biU authorizing the expen diture of six millions for repaying the streets of New York within the next three years. It will now be the task ol JSiew lor& contractors to organize a paving ring. At thexicnic: Darling, I'm going to let go of your hand for a minute, but you won't be mad, will yon, darling? I wouldn't let go until you did, only some sort of a bug is crawling down my back, and I can't keep my mind on yon and bngs at" the same time. As Englishman has invented a lamp burner which extinguishes the flame after six hours' burning. An economi cal couple. tried it on their daughter's most persistent suitor, but instead of taking the hint he got eleven kisses out of the girl before the lamp could be lit again. It has been calculated that the rail roads of the world are worth, nearly $200,000,000,000, or about one-tenth of the wealth of the civilized' nations or more than a quarter of their investe capital. At this rate all the readv money in the world would buy only about one-third of them. , The Illinois state board of agricul tnre has secured a flock of African os tricnes as a novelty ior tne coming fair. The flock will consist of seven birds full grown and will be on exhibi tion during the entire week of the state fair. The expense of securing this attraction was too great for one state board to incur and ic could only be done by pooling the expense and engaging the ostriches for, the Eionth of September by the respective boards of agriculture of Iowa, Nebraska, Kan sas and Illinois. Tnis year's crop of prairie hay in Oklahoma is estimated to be worth $10,000,000. Charles M." Lane, busi ness manager of the Oklahoma City Daily Journal, says that this town ex pects to ship Nearly a million dollar's worth before the end of the season. It will be the principal sourca of income br the settlers this year t and will fur nish employment for a great number of people who are in Oklahoma but have no claims. Unless unfavorable freight rates interfere the prairie hay will lit erally, be the salvation cf the new country's first year. - A rather curious marriage ceremony m 1 ' ' tn TT 1 1 - L was penormea uy squire .nan at Portsmouth, O., the other day, where by William Donnelly became father-in-law to his own son and his wife her daughter's mother-in-law. The con tracting parties were James Smalley and Annie Williams of Brush creek. The former is a child by William Sinal- ley's fiist wile and the latter by his sec ond wife s first husband. The American society of civil engin eers has appointed a committee to in vestigate the causes of the Johnstown disaster. The question to be deter mined by the committee is whether the flood of water over tha top of the dam was caused by the sinking of the dam from weakness, or simply by the ac cumulation of water in the lake beyond the normal height of the ; dam. The committee will also endeavor to ascer tain why the provision made for over flow was not operative. An adequate investigation of these matters by ex pert engineers is unquestionably desir able, if for no other purpose than that of properly fixing the responsibility, though this may be exceedingly diffi cult, if not impossible. The fact doubtless is that the responsibility is widely distributed, and not the least part of it, as one of the survivors of the calamity has said, rested upon the authorities of Johnstown who neglect ed to regard the popular demand to have the reservoir ' drained. But at any rate engineering science may gain something from the investigation, an it is well that one is to be conducted in behalf of the American society-of civil engineers. r.. --" SABBATH BEADING. TOYOLWGWOMEN. YOUR RELATIVES AS DAUGHTERS AND SIS "' TERS. :,' You all sustain one or both of these relations. Your earliest acts lie in this sphere. You will, in the exercise of your duties as daughters and sisters, receive and impart impressions that time cannot efface, and eternity alone can fully develop. Ia those relations, the temper of mind will be fixed, the principle of action be secured which will attend and distinguish you hrough life. Amid the endearments of home, while the charm of vouth is upon you, your peculiar disposition will be formed. It is one of the most solemn and impressive of all truths which an immortal mind can contemn plat6, that in your mcnt light and thoughtless days you are doing work for a lifetime indeed for both worlds. The most giddy hours of existence are to nave tne greatest influence upon your destiny. Those days of folly in of life when those giddy days, the days of youtn are to mould your character, and be forever indelibly im pressed upon it. Then the pliant twig is shaped, and the bend it receives it will never lose. Then at your feet springs up that little rill which you so can turn tnat it may become a river of life or death. You will live over again the scenes of your earlier years. lou will feel their power when the heavens and earth flee away and are no more The first lesson which your position and relations impose upon you is that of filial respect. "Honor thy father and thy mother that it may be well with thee, and that thou mav est live long on the earth," is the first com niana witn promise., liepeated are each command. . Promises large and gracious are connected with filial obe dience and filial respect. Curses bit ter and enduring have been pronounced upon those who neglect or disobey this duty. Paul classes with all unright eousness and murder" the crime of dis obeying parents. . especially snouid young women cultivate and exercise this trait of char acter. It is this, with habits or erder and neatness, and with a disposition cheerful and kind towards ail, that makes a young woman lovely and im parts to her that charm which is so de light ful. These secured in youth, adorn the freshness of that rosy period and, undimmed, give bloom to old age. If a young woman, amid the relations of early life does not form that char- .-tcter so desirable, she will inevitably be distinguished for rebeJlisn, perish ill humor, a narrow-minded selfishness with all these bad traits which, make her a disagreeable companion and an unwelcome associate. These are the briars and thorns which spring spon taneously upon that soil from which the hand of culture could have ex tracted the bloom and fragranoe of un fading beauty. Young women desire to be regarded as amiable and good tempered, polite and courteous. It is their wish to seem to be f&muiar with the accomplish ments of elevated life. At least, when abroad, these excellent adornments seem of great value. It is, however. true, that those charms which attracts the stranger and win for tfieir wearer such applause, are not always displayed at home. Luke the gems of a . young woman's toilet, they groce the drawing room of tne stranger, but the fireside of her parents. They attract and de light the stranger, but give no charm to the every-day life of home. In the slattern's, the loose and untidy garb, tne petulent tone and disrespectful re marks, one- would in vain attempt to recognize the distinguished young lady of the evening before, whose elegant attir, modest mien, respectful and sub dued conversation and great amiable ness, secured sucn applause and won so many hearts. Parents and brothers. often ask in vain for those amiable and affectionate accomplishments which. abroad, gave the , daughter and sister such a reputation for all that was love ly and refined Let me impress upon you the duty of cheering your own home and spreading there that charm which your acquirements enable you to spread abroad. To your parents be halituaUv respectful and obedient; to vonr rela- lives oe uniiormiv oblifiriTio and nmirt- . i . v . ' -i eons ; tnen at home and abroad you win ne in trutn ail you seem t be. i . i HOUSEHOLD. A Woman' Epitapb. An epitaph, written nearly a cen tury ago, and commemorating a poor woman who all her life had longed for rest and found it not, read as follows: Y- Here rpsts a poor woman Who always was tired, For she lived in a hone Where beln was not hired. Uer last words were: "Fr'ends, Fare ye well; I am going To a place where there's nothing Of washing or pewinfr. Thn weep not, my friends. When death shall us serer For I'll hare a nice time - In doing nothinjr forever, ' For everything there -J Is exact to my wishes; Since there's nothing to eat There's no washing of dishes. The courts with sweet mode Are constantly ringing; But having no voice I shall get clear of singing." She folded her hands With her latest endeavor And whispered, sweet nothing, 01 nothing forever! A jlealtlifalne-ts of Country Homes. . There is much care taken, and none too much, in locating in a new State or neighborhood, to select a place promising healthfulness for the family. Without good health, the advantages of fertile soil and cheap lands go lor naught. But how many people in the country look to see that the homes they already have are kept in good sanitary condition? As the country grows older the . soil into which sink slops are emptied be comes saturated with filth, so that it no longer disinfects what is thrown upon it as it used to do. Many countrv places are thus made more unhealthful than cities, where crowd ed population obliges greater care of sanitary mv?r:resL It ought to be no. ' -The-deathrate in the country ought to be lower than it is in cities, and will be if due care is given to good drainage and ventilation. . Good Inleations. Fred Russell was exceedingly busy. He had lived in the city only three years, and was already known as a trouble seemed to be, he told him self, that he had no time for anything except his daily business. He could not even write to his mother. For the last year, indeed, he had sent her only au occasional, hurried note. One night, having finished his work unusually early, he sat by the nre tnmkins: about ner, and it was "borne in upon lum, as she would have said, "to write her a long let ter. Just now there did seem to be an unoccupied hour for it, and he went to work with zeal. Ire described his mode of life at great length, inquired with careful interest about all the hornet flairs, and even tried to tell her at the end that he really loved her dearly, though he seemed to neg lect her ot late. 'There," said he, when he had OoUj, -"i Jvm'ir tenrtrrvi un Ye ueen as sweet on anybody since I was a boy; and here I register.a vow that I will write every week as good let ters, too, as I know how. to concoct!" H ben he came home from work the next nijrht, he ' found a telesrram awnitinjr him: "Mother is sick. Come at once." He hurried down to the quiet country village, and by the time he reached the desolate home, the mes sage should have been changed to read. "Mother is dead. ' Just as those words were uttered by his sob bing sister, he chanced to glance at the table, where lay the letter un opened. fehe would never read it. T.he dear eves were not now to be brjghtenetl, nor the faithful heart cheered by see- ng m those loving words the record or is good intentions. It was too late. - Epeasirees of Credit. It is alwaj's well for a businessman to have good credit, but to do this ne snoum avoid using it any more than is necessary. Practically pay as you go is as good policy for the buyer as any one can see it is for the seller tew people realize how much their credit costs them. It is by far the dearest luxury that they keep, and is what keeps more men poor then a retiring else. It is mainly the credit v.r.icn tne country store ex pects to, and is, perhaps, obliged, to give that makes it a dearer place to trade than the citv ,vhere for casual customers credit is impossible. Much more than the legal Tate of interest is. added '-to the price of the article where credit is given. In reality the the honest man who intends to pay his debts cannot aliord to be trusted. He is saddled with a part of the loss es of those who are dishonest in ad dition to interest. It is better to borrow money in a Jump and pay in terest on it, and buy only for rash than to buy on credit. Better still to do without things until monev is earned to pay for them. The gro eery bill is in thousands of homes the secret of lack ot thrift. "A Simple Cabba? Salad." At this season of the vear there is nothing more pleasing to the appe tite than a cabbage salad. The sys tem requires something of the kind when the Winter's supply of pickles is about run out. and lettuce and radishes too expensive for the aver age housekeeper. - A good salad is made by taking half of a good sized cabbage and chopping very fine, first taking out all tne core which would otherwise make the salad bitter. Take half a cup of vinegar, four or five tablespoonfuls of sugar, a pinch of salt and mustard enough to suit the taste and mix together. Then pour over the cabbage, also add : two hard-boiled eggs finely chopped. If procurable, a little celery is good chopped in with -cabbage. This placed in a glass dish looks verv pretty, and is very palatable. It palatable. makes a good addition to the table I x i l i- ,:!'.- ' a-I- I ""v ume, imu c-sucuiuuv m tue pingtime when we are wonderinjr what we can have in the way of a fresh vegetable. A Few Hint. A man must ask leave of his stom ach to be happy. For a boil, take the skin of a boiled egg, moisten it and apply. It will draw off the matter and relieve the soreness in a few hours. Boiled starch is much improved by the addition of a little salt or dis solved guraarabic. Windows should be opened at both top and bottom in order to procure proper ventilation. So-called unhealthful occupations can be made less so by properly un derstanding and practicing the laws of breathing. ' - A piece of zinc placed on live coals in a hot stove will effectually clean out a stove-pipe, the vapors produc ed carrying off soot by chemical de composition. To restore tumbled plumes and feathers to their original beauty they should be dipped quickly into hot water, then shake them and dry them slowly by the fire. . ' . i if Two Little Travelers. Among the passengers on the north bound train over the California and Oregon line" were two very small travelers, small in statue, but feeling wonderfully big and independent over a feat which they have just accomplished that of crossing the great American continent unaccom panied by parent or guardian. Flora and Arthur Wertheim, the travelers in question, ore aged re spectfully 6 and 9 years, and they are all the .way from New York, where they have lived ever since they first saw the light. "I hain't got no mother," said Arthur to a Chronicle reporter who saw the youngsters at the Oakland pier, and father's up in Porkland, for 'bout two where he's been years." ' . "You mean Portland," suggested the reporter. . "That's what 1 said Porkland " said the little fellow. "Sister an' I came out m a tourist car. ro, we didn't have anybody looking alter us," this rather disdainfully. "I was the boss o' the trip, bought the tickets an carried the lunch ba sket, an did everything. The children had cleaner faces than generally come from a New York tenement house, and their clothes, though rather worn and patched, here and there, were also clean, ,or as nearly clean as they might be ex pected to be after a 3,000 mile trip. "We came in a tourist car," the boy went on, not omitting to empha size the tourist." "These tourist cars ain't very high tbney, but they'lldo for poor folks. Immigrants like me an' sis can't have everything we want." ''''''" : the little maiden. "She's all the time wanting me to spend money on nonsense," said the boy. ignoring the remark so far as a direct reply was concerned, "but it takes coin to tra vel, and you can't fool it away and have 'nuff to take you through when you haven't got only just 'nuff to buy grub." When this chunk of philosophy had been delivered the little fellow went on to say that his father had gone from New York to work at his carpentry in Oregon; that he was going to be a carpenter himself, and knew how to build houses pretty well already. He had no trouble in gett ing over the road without, assistance, and thought he could easily make a trip around the world. "I will get to Porkland Monday morning," said. he. "Father will meet us at the depot, and then we'll be all right." San Francisco Chronicle. The Wise Men of Lagos. Once, uton a great festival, the town council of Lagos went to the parish church to hear mass. And all tne members or tne council were dressed in seemly state in black coats and tight black trousers and flowing cloaks, and each wore a wide brimmed hat of bla ck, over which a feather gallantly curl id. For their comfort a leather covered bench was placed before the chancel rail- And when they came to sit, each man, in- the order of his dignity, sat down upon the bench and placed beside him his hat. But when six of the twelve councilors were seated the bench was lull. Then a whispered conference was held, and it was decided that the bench must be stretched. So six of them took hold of one end and the other six took hold of the other end, and they pulled hard. Then they came to sit again. And now the first councilor put Ids hat beneath the bench, and the second did likewise, and so did they all. And they all in comfort sat down by which they knew that they had sufficiently stretched the lench. Being thus seated the first council or crossed his right leg over his left leg, and so did t,V second councilor, and so did they all. But when came the time in the mass when all must rise not one of the councilors could tell .certainly whbh two ofthetwen ry four legs were his, for all were clad in tight black trousers and all were crossed. And each man looked at the many legs among which were his own, and sorrowfully wondered if he ever should know his own legs among so many and so be able to rise and walk. And while they thus ponder ed it fell out that the" first councilor was bitten by a flea fiercely in his rearward parts. And the first coun cilor slapped at the flea, and that he might slap the better uncrossed his legs. Then the second councilor knew which were his legs, and so did the third, and so did they all. And so they uncrossed their legs, and with great thankfulness arose.- Scribner's Magazine. FOR THE FARMER. Asrirnliiral Sotes. The old sow may rip off the bark of a young fruit tree with her teeth. Look out! Better no bed than a wet bed The cross-bred pigs will be the strongest and be best. If you have a large flock of layers, as soon as a hen gets over fat and stops laying send her to market. Wood seasoned under cover is worth enough more to pay for hiring help to put it in the shed this spring. The roots of trees or plants H kinds resemble fish in one respect; cannot live long exposed to the at mosphere. " A dog which habitually roams aroupd the country without his own er is a public nuisance, and to sup press hiin with a shotgun is a public benefit. c The Cleveland Bay originated in England. It may be a distinct breed and is a distinct breed, even if it is a cross. There is some dispute as to how the breed was treated. The colon's dark. It is said that the legality of de horning has been tested in the Eng lish courts and that the decision is adverse to the practice. The friends of the business, it is said will carry the question to the higher courts. The sugar beet a few ; years ago was a plant not rich in sugar, but under the fostering care of the French and German government it has be come but little inferior to the sugar cane of the tropics as a sugar pro ducer. Mercurial ointment, carefully used, is the easiest and surest remedy for lice on cattle, but it must be thor oughly rubbed in where it cannot bo licked off, and animals should not be exposed to wet for a few. days after its application. An English dairy writer once as serted that "every third cow in Great Britain is unprofitable in the dairy." Let every dairyman who reads this sit down and figure out the real truth regarding the work of each cow in the stables. If it is true that 33 per cent, of the dairy cows in use are profitless, how can dairying e made to pay? Farmers who take up and improve new places will do well to set out berry bushes, strawberry plants and grape vines before they plant fruit trees. A crop of berries can be ob tained the second year after the planting is done. It is necessary to wait many years, however,foracrop of any kind ot large fruit, as most fruit trees are of a slow growth. With a liberal suply of currants and berries the want of large fruit, will not be severely felt. , Few successful pork raisers now Tceep any nogs over-winter except those intended for breeding purposes. They prefer to have pigs dropped very early in the spring and they slaughter them about Christmas time. They find that young hogs gain in weight faster than old ones do when allowed the same amount of food. These small hogs do not afford as much lard as larger onea do, but their meat is of a good quantity and is suited to the demands of the market. Says the London Live Stock Jour nal "Agricultural horses are fetching very high prices in the west of Eng land, from 50 gs. to GOgs. ($250 to $300) being a common figure for anything like serviceable animals. A ral e lot of horses, the property of Mr. H. Mayo, leaving Corker's Frome Farm, and other gentlemen quitting their holdings in Dorset, were sold at the Dorset Horse Repository at Dor chester by Mr. V. Ensor, and made from 45 gs. to 05 gs., being princi- Eally purchased by dealers from .ondon, Liverpool, Bristol, and oth er centers; the run for second-rate ani mals being from 30 gs. to 38 gs." Singl? heavy horses a re very gener. ally superseding lighter double teams for that class of city hauling to which they are especially adapted. On smooth pavements a horse of this kind can draw an immense load in deed the ordinary driver seems to think that th s limit of strength has yet to be discovered. This class of hauling would furnish a market for a great deal of heavy drait stock, if there were no other source of demand. However, the field for dralt horses is constantly widening in other direc tions as well. ' Every pasture should be well sup plied -wiui water. One watering trough is not sufficient for a large pastur. Stock should not be obliged t o walk half a mile in the hot sun to quench their thirst. The comfort of animals should be considered. If cows are restless and uncomfortable they will give but little milk. Steers will not gain flesh if they suffer heat and thirst. Young animals of all kinds should be rendered as comiort able as possible. Their rule is large ly determined by the growth they make the first summer alter they are weaned. In his "Notes" in the Husband man Linden very sensibly declares that the continual dosing of unwell farm animals with condition powders and other medical compounds, with out knowing the cause of the disor der or action of the medicine, is usu ally attended with injury and oft times loss. Well-fed stock, kept in comfortable stables and given intel ligent care, unless in cases of epidem ics, rarely ever need medicine, and then only after a careful knowledge of the disease is obtained should it be given. , . An English writer says of the foot of the horse: The hoof is not a mere block of solid matter resembling horn; but indeed is, so ; to speak, "the patent safe" in which ure en locked the valuables and title deeds of the whole animal as a PIV; How many horsemen and by horsemen we mean tf J have bred them and worked them? Yet "gone at the hoot". is a common verdict of condemnation and a horse is often done at his prime through the carelessness of theshoer, who is r very often an apprentice blacksmith who. treats that portion of the live animal as if it were but the share of the plow. , The Rural Canadian says: "If the ability to consume food profitably was made a leading feature in breed ing by breeders of pure-bred dairy cattle, and as much importance given to it as is' now attached to families and strains, very soon half the uncertainties in selecting a good cow would be avoided. A few gen erations of judicious mating of ani mals known to be profitable dairy feeders would fix a type that would prove of far. greater value to the airy interests of the country than can possibly arise from the use of animals chosen simply because of their near or remote relationship to some great dam of sire that has a long list of alleged butter makers or large milk producers to their credit and for which high prices are often paid. . . f - . . fc Distances In Alaska. "When I sat at my desk in Sitka," said Gov. Swineford, to the Detroit Free Press,"I was farther from A ttu is land, the westernmost point in Alaska, than I was from Portland, Me. This may serve to give some idea of the prodigious distances of Alaska. But I can furnish a more striking one. If the capital of the United States was located in the cen ter of United States that is to say, at a point equidistant from Quaddy head, Me., and Attu island, Alaska it would be in the Pacific ocean some six. hundred miles north by west of San Francisco." It is, indeed an almost boundless empire that Mr. Swineford has ceased to govern and that Fred A.Maynard has lost. Few people appreciate the colossal size of the Alaskan domio ot the United States. Even prominent public men are apt to guard it as a little fringe of the frozen zone quite unworthy of their attention. William S. Holman once had this idea ot Alaska. A couple of years ago, when Gov. Swineford was urging the house committee on territories to report favorably on a bill to give Alaska something more than a sem blance of territorial government, Mr. Holman said: "Well, governor, my idea is that Alaska ought to be made a county of Washington territory. That would be the simplest way to dis pose of the troublesome Russianpur chase." Swineford was mad in a minute, lie promptly advised the great ob jector to go and buy some primer geography, and he never had the pa tience to discuss the matter with him again. It has long been said that the sun never sets on the British empire, but it is not generally known tkat it is equally true that the sun never sets on the domain of the United States. It is shining in the Aleutian islands while it is the dead of night on Martha's Vineyard. The United States laps nearly half way around the world. It extends from G7 de grees west longitude to 1C9 east longitude. Alaska has been eight hundred thousand and nine hun dred thousand square miles of land surface, and a great water area. It is nearly as large as the United States east of the Mississippi. Gov. Swineford took a journey last summer of more than ten thousand statute miles without leaving his domain as governor. He went on the United States steamship Thetis, which was placed at his disposal by the secretary ot the navy. The jour ney occupied four months and five days, being much longer than the famous exploring expedition of Gov. Cass, which played a part in the early history of Michigan. An Anecdote of Ericsson. One good story of Ericsson is missed from the hundreds that are now going about. It was told many years ago that the famous inventor was invited to hear Ole Bull play the violin. His reply was that he had no time for such frivolity, as he had been taught to regard music, that he never had an ear for it anyhow, that it would be a waste of his valuable time and a breach upon his staid daily habits. But somehow his friend man aged to bring the two great geniuses together. The meeting was said to have occurred in the inventor's shop. A violin was produced and Bull be gan to play while the inventor worked Pretty soon Ericsson paused in his work, then he dropped his tools and listened spellbound to the mngkal tones of the musician. He said, so the story ran, he had always felt that something had been wanting in his life, and that he had never known what it was until that day. Musical Courier. How a Wife Was Lost. A pair of Berlin lovers whose union was opposed by the girl's parents, eloped and set out for English soil on Heligoland to get married. When they got to Hamburg they found that no steamers were running, 60 they hired a sailboat. The waves were pretty high, and before they had been at sea an hour he excused himself to go below to lie upon a so la. She, left alone above desk, thought about it awhile, concluded that she didn't want to get married after all, and ordered the captain to turn back toward Hamburg. There her lover was unable to induce her to itay with him, and she went back to Berlin alone on the first train. A Shark Killed by Tohncco. In a short time-we had caught a nice mess of small snappers, from ten to thirty inches long, and we were having a real good time. We had not fished very long, however, Wforo a large shark put in an appearance and stopped our sport. We hm knew of his presence by his greedily snapping off the fish from one of my neighbor's lines, having followed it; up from the bottom. He executed this performance several times, and then the snappers stopped biting en tirely. Not even a nibble could we get, so we hauled in our lines ami commenced to pay our attentions to the shark. ; He was a monstrous fellow about fifteen feet long, and he kept sin mi ming round and ' round the vessel, sometimes on top of the water and sometimes down deep Mow us, but always at a respectful distance, llw reddish brown body could be plainly seen through the clear transparent green water, and you may bo sure that he was the cynosure of all eyes. A great many plans for his capture were discussed, but none appeared practicable within ourlimited means. The engineer suggested that if tho shark would give him time he would forge a proper hook and chain, but as the shark was unable to give him a guarantee he abandoned the pro ject. While we were thus talking, I no ticed the nativo pilot every now and then throwing overboard one of th snappers we had so rocently caught, and as the current carried it a little distance clear of the vessel the shark would gobble it down, and, in fact, the intervals were so regular that Mr. Shark seemed impatient when the regularity was broken by a little delay. We saw that our pilot had some ultimate object in yiew and it drew our attention to him. As he was born and raised on this coast and hud probably sejved his pilot's apprenticeship as a fisherman, he knew how to deal with his inveter ate foe, the shark. ; After having thrown over ten small fish he selected another a littlelarger than the others and with a stick of wood rammed a roll of chewing t o bacco, nearly as large as u man's hand, down into its belly and pressed its throat together again. Ho held it ready to throw, and as tho shark came up, anxiously looking for hi fish, he tossed it too him, and as it barely touched the water tho shark turned over on its back and Hiieked it in. The shark then swam oft ;is us ual to the side of the vessel and tl;n below us, and was apparently rising again in expectation of another fish when the nicotine commenced its A'ork. His struggles and contor tions were terrible to lehold, as he darted here and there in a blind rage and vomiting blood, but a he swam or was carried by tho current away Irom us his struggling grew gradual ly less until it ceased altogether. The tobacco had killed him. Forest and Stream. Rice Knew His Business TVnsliington Critic. . A Washington man tells the fol lowing story about Dan Rico, the fa mous circus clown and showman. Rico had a show out in some of tin? wild Western districts, and he learned that there was a conspiracy on foot to mob the circus. That used to 1m one of the greatest ck awbacks to tho circus, business. Every once in a while tho roughs ol a community would get together strenuous effort to show. It is so to a now, and this is one and make a clean out the certain extent cause for the army of apparently superfluous peo ple that a circus carries withit. Rice's people had opened the performance to a good crowd of people, but it soon became evident that the attack was being organized. Dan Rice cleared the ring and made a speech, "Gen tleman," said he, "lam herewith my show to entertain you. You know what the price is and you don't have to come if you dem't want to. I understand that there is a plan on foot to inob my circus. Now, I want to make a proposition to you. Pick.out the best man you've got. I don't care who ho is, and all the rest of you keep off. I'll fight him ii he ia as big as a house, and if 1 don't whip him I'll give you all your money back and the rest of the show for nothing." He won the sympathy of the crowd, who broke intoenthusias tic applause at this exhibition of nerve. Any riotous disposition was promptly suppressed. The boldness of the step, however, was somewhat modified by tho fact that Dan Rice was one of the best rough-and-tumble fighters in the country. An Anecdote of William II. According to the story lately cir culated in Berlin, the emperor ap peared at G o'clock one morning most unexpectedly at the barracks of a dragon regiment. The soldier were ready for manoeuvres, but the commanding officer had not yet ar rived. Th emperor waiter half nu hour, when the delinquent arrived. His feelings at the sight of his sov- ereign can better be imagined than described. But the emperor did not say a word. He assisted at the manoeuvres, made several observations, as usual, and finally left without addressing a word to the officer at fault, who con sidered himself lost. Ho went home in despair, expecting from momtnt to moment to receive tho news of hU disgrace. With the customary -expeditious ways of tho emperor, ho knew he would not havelongto wait. But the afternoon passed, then tho evening, and still nothing occurred. He had not dared to leave the house, in dread of the events that were to decide his future career. Finally, as the evening wore on, he ventured out for a walk. On return ing home he found a little package addressed to him. No letter or mes sage accompanied it. He hastily opened the mysterious parcel and found it contained an alarm clock. 7 V Y,