ft I v l-i'. K S I? r r , lY it If "f r i r ! i i - ! WHY THEY WANTED A REPOR TF.Tt. 'Whca I waaVorkinsr on a St. Louis paper," saul au oUl newspaper reporter over his midnight lunch". "1 hail rather queer experienca. I dropped into the office one evening after dinner and the eity editor asked me to go np to Chouteau avenue and see what was wanted. A card had been received ask ing that a reporter' should call. I 'thought that perhaps thero was a'wed--lng, or something of that sort, and bo I went to the house. I rang the bell.' .A young woman opened the door 'Step into the pnrlor, please,' she said. I removed my overcoat and hat and en tered the parlor. There' were three j'onng ladies sitting in the parlor, which Xros handsomely furnished. The young Jady who opened the door followed mt into the apartment. I sat down, and, 'to mako inyself agreeable, chatted about some conventional topic. All the ; young ladies engaged in the conversa tion, and before I was aware of it 1 t found an hour had slipped by. No one had said anything to me about what the reporter was required for, so at last I masked: . "'Well, miss, can you inform me what it is that you wished a reporter for?' . "The 3'oung ladies at this all smiled ;ond looked at one another. I thought that there was something interesting -and I finally asked boldly: " 'Well, I'm a reporter for the Demo- crat. What can I do for 3rou?' " 'O,' said the young woman who hnd opened the door, 'I'm sure there is nothing.' " 'Well,' I said, 'why was the presence of a reporter desired?' "All the young ladies smiled and at last one of them said: ."'Why, Cousin Annie is engaged to ;ft reporter, and as w e had never seen a reporter we thought we would write the ""-oflicc and have one call, so that we could look and sco what kind of a person a re porter, is. "At this naive reply I rather wilted and as soon as I could I pot ont of the house. I often wonder now what sort --t it vnrx fivis thoSn vonncr women im- pil n renortor to be." Cincinnati 'I'Jio IHiioy Suvod. ' Detective "I have discovered, sir, "that your confidential book-keeper, lIr. De Clerk, is a defaulter to the extent, of many thousands of dollars. As he has lived plainly, and has not gambled in stocks, he must still have nil your money in Lis possession; but if we arrest him, you will never get it, of course; and if xv-i; corner him and try to compromise -r half or two thirds, he will probaWly skip to Canada with the whole boodle." jBnsi ijp.sk Man "My goodness! Mr. De Clerk!" i Mr. Do Clerk "Yes, sir." . Business Man "Mr. De Clerk, a few lays njro I refused you the hand of my i .lau;rhter, and I afterward employed this I gentleman, who is a detective, to look I ,xwclosely into your personal character and letail to your correct habits and busi ness aptitude that I have changed my -iniiid. You shall have her." New York Weekly. . llHt ICcotiofiilziiiir Holler Tube). French engineers have recently' been testing boiler tubes with ribs or flanges on the inside, the invention of Mr. Jean Serve. A larger sursace for ab sorbing the fire's heat is presented, and a saving of fuel ranging from one-third to one-seventh has has been indicated. In experiments on a Ilhone steamboat . it was found that with ordinary copper tubes the combustion of one pound of coal evaporated seven pounds of water, and the sniode issued from the boiler at ft temperature of 680o f., but when the tubes were taken out and the Hanged : ones inserted, the evaporation immedi ately rose to nine and a third pound of water per pound of coal, and the heat of the escaping gases fell to 4(50 degrees. Tlie fSlcclrlcal OmiilbiiM in London. TIh3 electrical omnibus lately left the depot of the Ward Electrical Car com panv, and ran to Ens! on Nation. Some . ol tlie directors and cue managers oi tlie Liverpool tramways company were awaiting it, with Sir George Baden Powell, M. J, and Mr. Moulding, the chairman of the sanitary committee of the Liverpool corporation. The omni- .'lms returned by wny of Enston road, Great Portland street, and llegent street, Hay market. It came through the crowded traffic without exciting au3r alarm on the part of even private car riage horses. t'Kcn of clonic. Mr. Birch (who has told his scholars the story of Sir Walter Raleigh's using his cloak to enable Queen Elizabeth to pass over a puddle dry-shod, and who wishes the class to understand that Raleigh was a thorough gentleman) ''Now, children, that you have heard this pretty storv, what do 3-ou think of Sir Walter Raleigh ?" Tommy Twiggs ."Was he lookiu' for an ofiie'e?" Puck. Adding I'ritvlxo. An old vag who had leen in the habit of calling on a certain business man on Griswold street for dimes was asked the other day how much he would take to keep away for all future time.' He thought for a moment and then replied: 'G;ve me 50 cents and I'll never bother you again." "I'll do it. Here, let me draw up a writing to that effect." An agreement was drawn up and the vag read it over and laid it down with the remark: "I can't do it; there's some thing cold-blooded about that." "But yon agreed to." "Yes, I know; but think of a man selling his manhood for 50 cents! I'd starve first!" "Well, how much do you want?" "A dollar." "I'll e-plit the difference with 3'ou." "Well, I'll sign, but I want a proviso inserted that I do not hereby lose my self-re-pect, and that I do not forfeit the "-right to come up stairs and strike the man in the next room if I get hard up." It was added, and he signed and went off to strike a free lunch counter. De troit I ree Press. ItlUnnmrd. Finite. x. Prof. Moebius has proved, as lately Ftated to the Berlin Physiological so ciety, that the anatomical arrangements of the firing fishes fins and muscles make flight impossible. The fish simply shoots up out of the water wheu frightened and .is car ried along by the wind. Tlie buz asing of the fins, which has been urged is proof of real flight, is produced when a strong current of air strikes the tins of even a dead fish, and the rising over the crest of a wave or the bulwarks 01 a snip 13 explained by the ascending x.ui.cuib oi uir prouueeu wnenever a trong horizontal wind strikes an elo- -"uea object like the wave or ship.' ... . : . uaua utarrh cure is a liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly on the unjou ana me mucous surfaces of the sys t-em. Write lor testimonials, free. Manu (actured by v v . J. F. CHENEY & CO. Toledo, O. THE FAITHFUL CLOCK. AUl.o-Jsh my lianas are on my face, An l oli the time 1 go on tick; . Trust me. mine is a worthy case. .Th slow may tkink 1 am too qmcc. But fast and slow at once may ee At any time good works ia me. Good hours from day to day I keep; No one down early, none up late, Una ever caught me fast as-leep. If 1 1 un down. I loe my weight; If I should tJike a single drop 'T would break me, and my works woefS stop. A man wound up ism a fix, - ' ' But win J me up and I can cro. , Though hard the timet, I play no trlclca. And yet it ia on tick I do The const jnt work of my two band -A task the workman understands. I ometimps strike, hut only hit The laggards who are out too lat; And some of them hare little wit, And skulla to thick that if my weight Upon their btupid headsehould drop, They would not know what made them stop. George W. Bungay. BREAKING THE SPELL How many acres of lnnd dfti yfou say?" asked Miss Caxton. "Five-and-fortyj ma'am,'' said Major Bluff, leaning back in his chair with the complacency of one who sees in the future a snug commission. "Just on the edge of the river fine arable land, aud a part of it well wooded. Couldn't be a better prop erty. "And a large house, you tell me." "Thirty-six rooms, Miss Caxton. Intended for a summer hotel, but proved a failure on account of being too far from the railway station." "That would form no sort of ob jection to me," said Miss Caxton twirling her ej'eglasses meditatively. "Not the least in the world!" said Major Bluff balancing the office-ruler on the third finger of his reft hand, and if you want to secure a bargain now is your time." .'.'I'll go out and look at it," said Miss Caxton, who, if she was any thing, was prompt. She did so. She saw Olney Hall outlined against the orange glow of a March sunset, with the ruddy reflections yet lingering on the woods rising up in the back ground and the blue range of hills in the distance. "It's a nice place," said she. I'll buy it. At the price it is certainly a cheap, piece of property." "While she was waiting for her hot cup of coffe, before the one-horse chaise started to convey her to the railway station, five miles away, she asked a a few questions of the rosy landlady.. "Going to buy Olney Hall?" said, the lady, as she brought in hot but tered mufiiins. "Well I'm glad somebody is croinsr to buy it. I'ts been a drug on the market ever since She checked herself here and pre tended to be busy arranging the neat little butter-pat "and pitcher of cream on the napkin covered tray. "Since when?" Miss Caxton asked with alertness. "Since the neighbors got up that ridiculous ghost story about it," said Mrs. Hutf hings, with a forced laugh. "Of course it's all nonsense, but people will talk" "What was the story?" asked Miss Caxton. "Oh, nothing to signify. Hutch ings wouldn't have no patience with me if he knowed I had spoken of it," pleaded the women. "Since you've said so much you may as well say the whole," observed Miss Caxton, fixing on the shrinking landlady that judical gaze which had appalled many of a successive gen eration of school girls. "Well, the Olneys was a dreadful quarrelsome family," reluctantly spoke Mrs. Hutchings, "and some thing was always wrong there. Old Jabez Olney hung himself in the big circular hall, with a rope hitched over the banister-rail; and Mrs. Peter Olney was flung from a horse, lest in front of the door, with her head agin the stone step, and never drawed two breaths afterward.' "That might happen to any body," said Miss Caxton as she added another lump of sugar to her coffee. "Oh, yes; that might. But there was Alice Olney!" "What of Alice Oleny?" "She aud her father had troubled about the attentions of a vouns: man in the neighborhood" said Mrs Hutchings. "He locked her up stairs in her room, and she got out upon the roof and throwed herself down Some says so, and some says she lost her balance wavin' her pocket handkerchief to her beau, and fell accidental. Leastwisie she was killed. And since that day some of the neighbors declare solemnly that they see her, all in white, on the roof every Ash Wednesday night! , "Ash Wednesday night! What has Ash Wednesday night. 'to 'do with it?" "fJh, didn't 1 tell your niveryone o these dreadful things happeneu, takln one year with another, on Ash Wednesday. That s the queer part of it," said Mrs. Hutchings. Miss Caxton set down her cup and saucer with a clatter. "That ascounts, in some degree. for the extraordinary cheapness of the property," said she. "But shall not let it daunt me. People will build up a ghost story on the most absurdly insufficient founda tion, nowadays." "Just what Hutchings says," cried the landlady. , Miss Caxton bought Olney Hall at a bargain. She fitted it up for a nrst-class young ladies seminary, and had it failed with pupils when th summer vacation drew to an end. For Miss Caxton was an excellent teacher, and did not lack in executive ability. Undoubtedly, as she told herself, the ghost rumor detracted from the desirability of the premises: but one or two hints from a spectacled law yer as to suits for damages, in case of too much neighborhood loquacity, exercised a truly marvelous influence in silencing people's tongues and the "sweet girl graduates" and thir mates disported themselves on the moonlight lawns, floated down the sunlit stream in delicious little boats, and organized botanical excursions into the wood, undisturbed by any visions of the supernatural. "Olney Hall was a bargain after all," said 1 Miss Caxton, as she turned over the leaves of her ac count book and ledger with a satis fied smile. But as the season'approached where in the ghost was said to make its annual uninvited visit, Miss Caxton could not repress a certain uneasi ness. "It is very ridiculous of me," she said to Mrs. Bibb, her housekeeper and confidant, "but I shall certainly feel better when the month of Feb ruary is over." "My dear Carolina" said Mrs. Bibb, who feared nothing in the world or out of it. "Yes, I know," said Miss Caxton. "But you must remember there is a fallible spot in every armor and 1 think this is mine." Mrs. Bibb looked at the illumina ted calendar that hung above the mantel. "Well," said she. "Ash Wednes day comes on the fifteenth this year. To day is the tenth. Your season of probation will soon be over now." "I do not suppose that one of our sixty pupils have heard that ridicu lous nonsense," said Miss Caxton. "Not one!" said Mrs. Bibb decided "If we can pass over tins nrst an niversary, we are all right," said Miss Caxton "We are all right!" automatically rr, ated Mrs. Bibb Ash Wednesday, like the Ides of March arrived, and not the keenest eye could have detected the least change in Miss Caxton's demeanor, as the slow hours crept on, settling at last into the warm purplish twi light of a winter night, in which hung the crescent of a young moon, silver, pale and pure Tea passed over, the last yawning school-girl went unwillingly to bed, and Mrs. Bibb wa3 just returning from administering a does of laud anum and sweet oil to the youngest pupil, who was afflicted with earache, when one of the housemaids bounced out of the dinning-room door and stood before her as pale as a sheet of paper. "Please, ma'am," .clasping Jaer hands over head, "it's there!" "What's there? What's there?" sharply demanded Mrs. Bibbs. "Why, you know, ma'am," said the porter, who was close behind with an empty coal scuttle in his hand by way of excuse, "and we knows, and all the village folks knows " "And everybody knows, gasped the fat old cook, "except those dear lambs in the dormitory up stairs. Ain't it Ash Wednesday night, into the bargain? "Are you all crazy?" sternly de manded Mrs. Bibb, holding her lamp high above her head, like a statue of "Liberty Enlightening the World." or have 3rou been drinking: "Hush, Louisa! said the calm composed voice of Mi3s Caxton. "This matter is best settled by being enquired into, My good people, lacing the little crowd which was now augmented by two or three more scared maids, the knife-boy and the gardener's assistant, "what does all this mean? "It's Ash Wednesday, mum,', mut tered the cook, ftomewhat cowed by her mistresses magisterial aspect. "It's the ghost!" cackled the rr ci T dener's assistant. "On the ruff o' the house!" whis pered the original housemaid. "And 1 seen it with theseeves! And there s some things as flesh and blood can't endure; and a month's warning, ma am, please! "Give me a shawl, Mary Anne," said Miss Caxton, taking Mrs. Bibb's arm, "Oblige me, my dear Louisa, with yonr company for a mmute. And Miss Caxton; accompanied by the faithful Mrs. Bibb, and followed by a stream of quacking and whisp ering retainers, opened the door and walked out upon the lawn. There stood Miss Parker, the mu sic teacher, Fraulein Ohibach, the German instructress, and the rest of the maids, staring up towards the roof of the old Hall. "Didn't I tell you so?" said Miss Caxton. "There is nobody there. How could there be?" "Wait!" gasped Miss Parker. "It was there iust now. It comes and goes!" , Almost as she uttered the words a white figure glided across the roof in full view, plainly outlined against the starlight. Mrs. Bibb could feel her friend start, but the irresolution was mo mentary. Like a female Napoleon, Miss Caxton turned once more to the crowd. tiave the goodness to remain here, said she," and be silent. Ghost or reality, I mean to investigate this affair. Mrs. Bibb will accompany me. "Certainly!" said Mrs. Bibb, with alacrity. "Oh, please, mum, don't," whis pered the cook. "There don t no luck come to nobody as meddles with But Miss Caxton and her lieuten ant paid no attention, keeping on their way through the hall, up flight alter night of chilly stone stairs, un til at last thev climbed the ladder and emerged into the frosty star light; nearly running into the arms of Mary De Barreter, the eldest ot the graduating class, who' stood there staring into the ky, while close beside her crouched Nettie Vane, the valedictorian of the year, with a fur lined cloak muffled around her, while Miss De Barreter was wrapped in a white flannel blanket folded above her other srarments. "It s Miss Caxton!" shrieked Mary. "And the Bibb!" screamed Nettie, totally forgetful of her - manners. "Oh, Polly, we are lost!" Miss Caxton laid her hand, smooth as velvet, yet firm as steel, on the shoulder of the white vision. "Miss De Barrester," said she, "may I enquire what you are doing here, at this time of night, and in this remarkable costume?" "It's me, Miss Caxton." confesses tlie conscience stricken valedictorian "I'm telling her stars. All about her future husband, you know, and the rivals she is to have, by astrology." "By what?" echoed Miss Caxton. "Uncle Jamie's.Greek servant that came home from Constantinople with him taught me," said Miss Vane; "and Polly's natal star is on the meridian to-night, and on we didn't suppose you would know."" xou are two very naughty girls!" sternly spoke Miss Caxton. Step this way, please", both of you, towards the parapet." Uracious goodness! You re not going to throw us off the roof, are you?" said Miss De Barreter, with a giggle. "Mary Ann, Thomas, Peter all ol you," said Miss Uaxton, in a voice like a well bred trumpet, "I wish you to observe that Miss De Barreter and Miss Vane have taken it into their wise heads to go star gazing to night. Now are you satisfied?" "Satisfied about what?" said "in nocent Nettie, t "The servants sawyou up there," said Miss Caxton, "and I suppose must have taken for you" "Burglars! Oh! how funny! cried Mary, dancing up and down to keep warm. As if there could be anything to steal off the roof. But please. Miss Caxton, you're not very angry with us, are you'f You won't write to our parents?" "This must never happen again!" said Miss Caxton, severely. "No, indeed!" cried Nettie Vane, Jffgmg and kissing her. "And it was no use! I couldn't find Cassiop eia's chair, and the pointers of the North Star had got clear around in the wrong direction, and old Con- stantine's system wouldn't workl And 1 am quite sure that astrology is a humbug from beginning to end?" Miss Caxton lectured the two girls up stairs, having hist secured the kev. Mrs. Bibbs went down stfiirs, and in her return lectured the thoroughly conquered servants. "Let me never hear the word 'ghost' again" she said, "on pain oi instant dismissal, without a charac ter." ,r ;: ;:r: ": "-' "No, mum; we won't!" said the ser vants in unison. "But it was Ash Wednesday night!" "Which only proves, sternly ut tered Mrs. Bibb, "that you can be aa great fools on Ash Wednesday night as upon any other night in the year. ' And the domestic force of Olney Hall were unprepared with an an swer to this overwhelming argument. Practical Jokes. - A practical joke is a sorb of trick played by one person upon another, in the hope of making hir.i uncom fortable and ridiculous. To put one's friend in an absurd situation, to in terfere with his rights, to do some thing which will hurt him in body or mind, not very deeply perhaps, yet really, is the object of the prac tical joker. I have never in my life been able to see the least good, the least innocent fun, in practical jokes, but I have seen a great deal of evil and mischief resulting from them. I cannot think of a person addictedlto practical joking- as anything but mean anu couLempiiuie. ror now can we honor the disposition which takes pleasure in cruelty; Some years ago, just at dusk, a maid servant in a certain beautiful home took it into her head that it would be rare fun to dress heself in a sheet and frighten another one of the servants. So she slipped into the grounds, hid herself behind a tree, and waited her oppor tunity. Dancing merrily along, singing with a voie'e like a bird, came a sweet little daughter of the house, who had been sent on an errand to the lodge at the end of the green avenue. The merry child, sensitive to her finger-tips, caught a glimpse of the straight, stark figure skulking behind the oaks, and was so frightened that a few months afterward she died of nervous shock the physicians said, which then began its fatal work. - In one of our New England col leges a youth who had been study ing hard that he might enter the Freshman Class was startled from his sleep at midnight by a party of fellows in masks, who proceeded to. make sport for themselves by the stupid process called "hazing" their companion. They had their silly tun, hut it is to he hoped that none of the number engaged in it can ever think of that night without a pang, for it made the youth insane. I don't like to believe that any of my readers engage in this wretched kind of jesting. If they do, it is be cause they have never looked at it from the right point of view. There isn't among my friends one, I am sure, who would be happy in making any one else miserable I saw Fred the other day perched in a nook 'way 'way up in a tall tree, anl I thought. "What a splen did climber you are, .bred, and how nimbly you'd run to the mizzen-top if you were a sailor boy!" I knew that Fred was as sure-footed as a cat, and had eyes like a squirrel, and the grip of a monkey, so I was not alarmed on his account. Not so his mother. She came to the door, called "Fred! Fred!" and finally des cried him in his airy nest, from which "his voice fell like a falling star." Then she was greatly distressed and frightened, and I was disappointed in Fred, because, instead of relieving her fears at once, he said: "Oh, pouf, mamma! there's no danger. Why are you so excited? I've been here dozens of times." He did descend at last, but. a true gentleifcan and Fred means to be a gentleman would not have al lowed a woman to be frightened even for an instant, especially when the woman was his own mother. The spirit which leads one not to care when a friend is suffering ter ror on one's account is the same which makes the practical jest pos sible. Aunt Marjorie's children must banish this if they would make their little world happy. Harper's Young People. An East Saginaw family ihat is supported by public charity scraped together money enough to pay the tax on a $3 dog. CUKBEST EVENTS. The Southern PresbyterianGeneral Assembly has voted ayes 113, noes 31 against the doctrine of Evolu tion. But even that hardly settles the vexed question. - ; . . New Yobk City has one physician to about every four hundred people; Paris, one to about 1,475. In the whole of France there is about one physician to 3,000 inhabitants; in England one to every 1,200, and in the United States one to every 750. Chief Shay, of the New York Fire Department, has been retired at his own request for disability. He will ' receive f 2,350 a year half the amount ot the pay of a chief in act ive service. As Mr. Shay is not yet 55 years of age, this pension seems like a royal reward for civil service. ..'.- '-.,.'"." The chattel-mortgage shark is a man who has a deep very deep in terest in his patrons. A case has been exposed by the New York press in which a hard-hearted wretch, is seeking to compel a woman to pay $111.70 for the use of $300 for three months. - . Master Jabez Bailey, of Fitch- ville, Conn., has broken six sheep to harness, and he drives them about the village daily. He is not 15 years old,but has broken oxen and horses. He is going to tackle pigs next, and if he is successful with them will try breaking a team of hens, and next geese or turkeys; At Heading the other day a young man who had hired a livery team returned to the stables, when it was seen the horses had been overdriven. Without any ceremonv the vounsr man was lifted up bodilv and thrown into trough. It is said to be an old custom in Eastern Pennsylvania to duck men who abuse horses or fail to pay their bills. At certain seasons of the year there is a mysterious disappearance mnia. It is strange that such things occur in cycles, and that in this country, where the communica tion is so general anq minute, at cer tain intervals a number . of people may disappear from a place and their whereabouts remain a mystery. Where do they all go to and what becomes of them? There is a most wonderful poplar tree growing just beyond Sharp Top Mountain, a few miles from J asper, Ga. It has two trunks, both per fectly developed, and standing two or three feet apart at their bases, and look exactly like two smooth, straight poplar trees. At a height of 30 or 40 feet these two trees come together and form one perfect body from where they join to the top. There has been discovered, four miles south of Rattlesnake Springs, Washington Territory, an extensive ledge of marble, in which beautiful trees or plants of moss are as fre quent and as clearly defined as in the moss agate, though the marble is not translucent. The body of the stone is mostly white, with splotches of pink and blue between the bunches of moss. Henry C. White, of New York, in a letter to the Tribune, says: There is really no ground for the theory of the formation of a deaf race of men, simply because out of the 33,000 deaf mutes, fully eighty percent, lost hearing from sickness or from purely accidental causes, and the defeat is not repeated in the offspring; on the other hand, congenital deafness ha3 been decreasing, as is shown by the annual reports of every State insti tution in the land." A gigantic whale that has been ex hibited lor some time in JJernn was recently transported to Vienna, but on reaching the Austrain frontier the custom authorities refused for a long time to pass the monster of the deep, on the ground that "such a thing" was not registered in the cus torn tariff! The Austrains seem to have a prejudice against whales, for this one does not seem to have had a friendly reception from the popul ace 111 Vienna either. A young Hollander, who had been working "in disguise" as an ordi nary laborer in several of the large furniture factories of the West, turns out to be the son of a wealthy cotton goods " manufacturer at Henejtoff. He came to the country to learn the wood manufacturing business, and will return to his native country, where he will establish a sash, door and blind factory, equipped with the latest American machinery. This is an improvement on the general rtm of foreigners who came to t his coun try "in disguise" as fortune hunters and disturbers of peace-loving minds: 1 Half a Shine. A man with very muddy boots was accosted by a juvenile polisher with the usual question: "Black your boots, sir?" "No." "Black 'em for two cents!" "No." "I'll do 'em for nothing!" "All right!" The young hopeful set about . his work with great energy, and soon had one boot in bright, shining condition. Then, turning up his face to the blackee, he gravely announced: "Now, you'll have to give me five cents to do the other." . Thick brown paper should be laid tinder carpets if the patent thing is not to be had. It saves wear and prevents the inroads of the moths, which, however, will seldom give trouble if tarred paper is placed be neath the edg Pavement of American Pine. It anneais that wood pavements have met with greater success in some of the countries of Europe than iu onr own, the reason assigned for this beinqr the fact of their having a foundation of con crete to rest upon m the former, at the same time receiving more- attention there in the way of maintenance than here. Owing to its hardness and resin ous quality, American yellow pine, it Is stated, has become the favorite wood for this purpose in Hamburg and Berlin; and official report says that Frederick's Bridge, Berlin, which was paved in the spring of 1879 wilfll the wood in question, is still in good condition, while the ap proaches, paved with granite block, have twice since required repaving. The Opera platz, also, in front of the Empcror'a palace, was paved seven years ago, partly with yellow pine and cypress, at a point where the traffic is greatest, while at other points stone blocks were used, the laying of the dif ferent surfaces with these several ma terials being at the same time. Accord ing to the report, the area covered with the wood pavement is at present the one thnt is best preserved. The Down. C. Hills, in the Breeders' Gazette, says: "My judgment as to the special qualities cf the several breeds of mutton shee has been given very frankly, with out any purpose of detracting from the merits of any to which they are justly entitled or exaggerating as to those for which I am most partial. As stated be fore, in this extensive country of ours, with its varied soil and climate, it is safe to sny that all of the Down breeds can be introduced into some parts and bred with profit to the breeder and great ad vantage to the country. In all our large cities there has for years past been a good demand, at liberal prices for first class mutton. This demand, is now ex tending to the smaller places and gradu ally our people are learning to appre ciate and make use of it more and more, and it is reasonable to assume that in the near future we shall .become like onr British ancestors, a nation of mutton eaters. 1,000,000 riiUd-Wtdowa. Edward Everett Hale, talking before the Iiamabai association in New York, on Monday, in furtherance of a fund for the child-widows of India, mentioned some interesting facts. Ho said that in India there are 100,000,000 women. Twenty million of thejse are widows, and nearly 1,000,000 are "child-widows" under the ago of 19 who are enduring a bondage worse than slavery. He said it was the custom for a man in India to have as high as 100 wives, some of whom were compelled to marry as early as 8 or 9 years of age. When the husband died his numerous wives joined the vast army of ulaves. These widows are com pelled to wear one dress, have to eat one meal a day, are never allowed to speak to a man, excepting their own flesh and blood relations, and cannot marry again, except to a man iu their own caste, which very rarely happens. Philadel phia BecordL Where Work Is Pleasant. Neglected Wife-"Why don't you go to work?" Husband fa ne'er-do-well) "I ain't got no tools." Neglected Wife "Deacon Smith of fered yon five dollars to fix his fence, and A'ou have a saw, and a plane, and a hammer and nails. What more do you want? Husband "The saw ain't no good, and I nin t got no file to sharpen it. (Jul bmith km hx his fence hisself. Same Husband (ten years later) Hist! Sajy wife, I have escaped from the penitentiary. Gimme somo other clothes, so I kin light out agin." ife "My, my 1 How did yon get out? Husband "I dng forty feet under ground with a two-tined fork, and then cut my way through two feet of stone wall aud ten inches of boiler iron with a saw made ont of a tin dinner plate." rsew lork Weekly. Oregon, the Paradle ot Farmers. Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant crorn. Bept I'm 1 1. grain, gma and atock country la tna world. Full in form at I un free. Addres tUe Orejfu Immigration UoarJ, l'ortlaud, Orezou. A New League. The New York Mail and Express has discovered a league of men in that city who are pledged not to attend evening parties so long as the women wear low necked dresses. The reason for this pledge is not excessive modesty on the part of the men, oh no, but the instinct of self-preservation. It is complained that the rooms where low neck dressed women are displayed, have to be kept so hot for the benefit of the women, that tlie men suffer from becoming over heated so that they take cold upon pass ing out into the open air, pneumonia follows and death ensues. Thus deco letto dresses are actually killing off the men, who are none too .plenty at the best. ' In 1830 ''Brown's Bronchial Troches" were introduced, and their success as a cire for Colas, Coughs, Asthma, and Bron chitis has been unparalleled. Troops have gone to to eject settlers. the Cherokee strip . Sheriff Sale. Smoke the Sheriff SaleSejjar. A straight 10 cents Havana Cigar for 5 cents. Peach yellows are on the increase in the Delaware peninsula. There are 85S soldiers drawing a pension of $72 per month. When Baby was rick, wo gave her Castorla, When sho was a Child, cue cried for Castorla, When she became Miss, sho clung to Castorla, When che had Children, she gave them Castorla, The centennial celebration at New York cost $2,000,000. The source ot the Mississippi river has been discovered in two lakes 110 feet above Lake Itaska. The production from the machinery ot the United State is more than equal to the labor o! 500,000,000 men. FOR STRAINS AND SPRAINS. NEW AND STRONG CASES. . A Surprise. Sortoa, Zlasi., Job It. ItSI. X wii& to lnfora r ei wbat I eoatidcr meit wos. - dcrfol. YMterday I apralncd my anal on a enrfc atoa and at Bight could only stop on mjr foot with groatest pain; fot a bottU of St. Jacoba Oil and appUcd It fraoly; to-day I ara about my bualaoaa . aa asaal without felin( any IneoiiTtnlenca. . r. A. GATLOU). Strained Ankle. Clcreland. 0., Jon 35,- ISIS. Was la bed with atrainad anal; aad can; omplataly cared by Bt. Jacobi 0U. Ho return ot At Druggists and Dealers. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore, UL JOSEPH H. HUNTER, ttLIWilUi Or asiv .far evertlee lYraa tlase to tlsae la a. wmi4 tVesa ItoaUre. wtU t eoa to aoy tala -. that factory i. ! rloo. tar rsaaislcstwasa The Term Applied. Tramp (to pedestrian) "Would yon be kind enough to give me 15 cents? I, want to buy a clean collar and have my boots blacked." Pedestrian "What tV your profession?" "I'm on the rail road." "Brakeman?" "WeU'er-kind of a brakeman; : I'm nearly always broke." Pack. . : Can the sale ot an inferior article con stantly increase for 24 yeiire? Dobbin Electric Soap has been on Unnrket ever since 1865, and is to-day aa eve the bent and purest family soap 0B ad Try it. Your grocer will get it. BxPoelmaster-Ceneral flatten. Ex-Postmaster-General Hatton i a familiar figure on the streets of Wash ington to-day, and he is a remarkably successful newspaper man at present. His high official position brouslit him wide acquaintance with public men, and his well-known reliability in hia inrer donrse with men of all secss and croedf . mako him the best real news-getter of the Washington Post. He can go into the rooms and offices of prominent men, and in private conversation learn from them many facts concerning current eventswhich they would not communi cate to the average newspaper reporter, because they would fear that the infor mation given out might not be proiwrly handled and prudently given to the pub lic. But they all trust and like Frank Hatton, and by reason of these facts ha is doing a remarkable business in Washington in the newspaper field. A Piece of Her IHIitd. A lady correspondent has this to say: tT nvan tsx nl if a a . I An -v 9 w - - v certain class who object to eai'ertisinr. when it costs them anything this won't cost them a cent. I suffered a living death for nearly two years with headaches, back ache, in pain standing or walking, was be ing literally dragged out of existence, my misery increased by drugging. At last, in despair, I committed the sin ot trying an advertised medicine. Dr. Pierce a 1 avonte Prescription, and it restored me to the blessedness ot sound health. I honor the physician who, when ho knows he can cure, has the moral courage to advertise the fact." The medicine mentions 1 U guaran teed to cure tliosedclic?tediaeasAs peculiar to fu males. Read printed guarantee on bottle-wrapper. For all derangements of the liver, stom ach and bowels, take Dr. Pierce's Pellet. One a dose.' Great men. Britain fisheries emploj 250,000 For two two-cent stamps we will send you one ot the handsomest almanac-t in the country. "Homestead," Omaha, Neb. It is estimated that Americans will spend $10,000,000 in Europe this season. In the south there are 10,000 colored school teachers. Joy to the World) PERRY DAVIS' PAIN KILLER for the entire eradication of all Pain, EXTERNAL or INTERNAL No fatuity should be without it. One twenty-five cent bottle will do mor, to convince you of the eflicacy than all the testimonials we might present, and we have an abundance of this kind of evidence. ITS ACTION IS LIKE MAGIC. lor Coughs, Colds and Sore Throat, a teaspoonful of rain-KHle.r taken at the beginning ot an attack will prove an al most never-failing cure, and save much SUFFERING MP MONEY. PAIN-KILLER is an article that has combined in itall that ?oes to make a first-class family medi ine. Bti AARE OF IMITATIONS. AU Druggists sell Tain-JUlIer a? 25c, 50c, and $1.00 a bottle. SieKCatEADAGIS CARTERS loUirelytured tit these Utile PilU. Tboy also roliere IX OlTTLE treaa from Dj-jpla.Ia (Ugeatlon aud ToolIart; uttni. A nerfnet rem IVER PILLS. r edy tor Pizzinma.Nanaen DrowslnenH. Had Taut- tit the Mouth. Coated Tongue, Pain in the Hhla TO It WD LIVER. The; regulate the Vowels Purely Vegetable. Price 25 Cent; CASTES HEDICHTE CO., NEW YOiLS. Small Pill. Small Dose, Small Price. WELL DRILLS, FOR ALL PURPOSES. Hare made 2 ft. a minute witli th AUSTIN 4 TRIUMPH. Send 20c for mailing Catalogue. F. C. Austin Mfg. Co. COR. CARPENTER ST. AND CARROLL AVC CHICAGO. ILLINOIS. OTHERS' FRIEjg imosCDILD DIRTIlusr IP USED BEFORS CONFINEMENT. Book to "Mothers"' MAiLinnFRrt. BKA1F1LI REUI LATOIt CO., ATLANTA JO A Sold bt aixtmiuooists- EOPS 5T TUIiATED VHKIZ Posltltely Cured with VeeeUM Ktmedl. Hare cured many thousand casca. Cure patlfn' pronounced hopeieaa by tbo bent physicians. Krom Am done symptoms rapidly disappear, and In tea oayt at least two-thirds of all syruptoma are remov ed, bend for free book of testimonials of miraculotia cures, len daya treatment rurnished free by mail. It yon order trial, aend 10 wnta In stamps to pay Potg. PJ-.": U.UR1,N SOWS. Atlanta. Ue- 1C O0A eOCfl OO AMONTJIcitnuetuaia f I Os-lw ls""worklnjj rr us. Asmit. Iireferred who can furnish a litie anil kit their wtio; hue to the busings. Spr uiomuuU may l ptxiitaldy einjilovrd ln. A tew v.-cn ie in town n i J vitlea. U. ('. JOHNSON ft IY low Main St.. Uk'hiuund. Vs. N. M. 1'leane state n-s and buni rxptTt'-'iro. Sev er mind about sending stamp It r repb'. U. K J. & Co, PENSION JOI1 N W.TOOII It IS. Ijte Principal .xamiti U.M. I'euaion bureau, Alt y at Law, Waahinztou, II. i;.. Ha--fniullv Prnaecmea t:iaiin original, lncreaae, re-ratlng. widows", children ! dependent relallvea. Experience? 8 yra. In laas war. 13 yri. In Pension Bureau and attorney since. DETECTIVES Wanted In crery connty. fchrewd men to act under Instruction In our Secret bervlue. Kxpri'iic not necesary. bend 2c. atamn. irann:tii Detective) ltureuu Co.. 44 Arcade, Cincinnati. O. find Plso'e Cure for Consumption THE t BEST remedy for boareenesK aud to clear tho throat. day. Samples worth S. 1.1 KUnE. Te Lines u VUsterSai Safety Rein Holder Co..Hollv. Mien. uot under horses' leeu VVrita H-w. Lincoln N. U. Attobrv. Vsshlnrtnn. P C. WILL OKT YOllll PENSION wlHiout eelay suMroaa tfireet Area u. Mas u rtoo are ssutasiss. bosiosa. 4 5a & 4 m tVrVtjCs -HHM-r--r--rT-