ft, f ' THE LITTLE ARM-CHAIR. f arts Ib Ska JHtH ana-ahatr ; ll Al4 imrtrty thmkm n him. Baa aferoaah Uka Soak at lha loaui a Tfca Whom of bar boy'a Maaat tmtm. A Im racaa u auwnir is w ira. acta to BMCTllT is iu I liagti taat cfeaara law Wit fcaimiiii ha haaia a book In Ua hand, awiwiaill paaHl aaa alaxa. 44 aaa linl ia aara 10 aadarataaa, ana taa Saaraa hard to mat ; aWi aba aaaa tba ao4 ol aia iai bars aad, As laruad ths lit lis auu, Aaa aba hasra tba wori m otta aaid, "4a fasr tut our littls ona." Vfcay awndsring day!, tba dear avast dart Wkn child un auujr oair SVaa bar to w jld, lo kia and to praiaa. At bar a una in tba little cbair. ha lual huu bacji In tba bujr yeara V ban tba gnat world caotit tba ujb, And ta aurada away put hiipea and taara Tti hia )rfaaa in tba baltlo Tan at now aad than in a willful draaju, Uka a ptalore out ol date, ha aaaa a baad with a goktan glaam Bant o'ar a pan-.-U and slate. And aha Uvaa a(aui tba happy dar, Tba da of bar Touuf Ills' apriDg. Wha tba auall arm-cbalr atood juat Is tba rf warrtnicg. IN ARIZONA. T CONAN DOYLE. "It air strange. It air," he was say-! ing as I opened the door of the room I where our little se in i-literary society 1 met; "but I could tell you queerer tbiags than that 'er almighty queer ; things! You can't learn anything out of books. sirs, nohow. ou wt, i It aiet thai irjn as ran string Famish 'together and as li.nl no kI eddication as Hods theiu.v'lves Id tbe queer places I've been in. They're mostly Tough men, sirs as can scarcely speak aright far less tell with pen and ink the things they've seen; but if they could, they'd make some of your Luropians hair riz with astonish ment They would sirs you bet.'" Hia name was Jefferson Adams, I believe; I know his initials were J. ; JL, for .vou tuav see them yet deeply whittled on tbe r ght hand upper panel of our smoking-room d or He iett us this legacy, an I also some artistic patterns done in tobacco juice upon our Turkey carpet; but beyond these reminiscences, our American story-teller has vanished from our ken. He gleamed across our ordinary quiet conviviality like some brilliant meteor, and then was lost In the outer darkness. That night, however, our ew Mexican friend . was in full swing. -".ina you," he continued, "I 'hain't got no grudge against your "men of science. 1 likes and respects a chap as can match every beast and plant, from a huckleberry to a grizzly, with a .'aw-breakiu' name: but it you - wants real Intere-tin' facts some thing a bit juicy you go to your 'whalers and jour frontiersmen, and '.our scouts and Hudson Hay men. 'Chaps who mostly can scarce sign their names. Sow, which of you gentlemen has ever been in Arizona? None, I'll warrant I've been there, sirs lived there for years; and when think what I've seen there, I can scarce fit myself to believe it now. I was one of Walker's fiibusters and after we'd busud up and the chief was hot, some of us made tracks and lo cated down there. A regular English an1 American colo iy we was, with our wives and ;:hilJren and all com plete, i "To think of such a land being , built for a few greasers and haif treeds lfsa rn susin' of the gifts of Frovid nee. Grass as hung over a chap's head as lie rode through it and t ees so tbick that you could n't get a glimpse of blue sky for leagues and leagues, and orch ds like umbrellas! Maybe some on you has jeen a plant as they ra'ls the "fly cather" in some parts of the States " "l Manor muscipula." murmured jur sc.eiitiflc man par excellence. 'Ah, 'Die near a municipal,' that's him! You'll see a fly stand on that 'ere plant and then you'll see the two sides of a leaf soap up together and catch it between them, and grind It np and mash it to bits; and hours after, ir you open the leaf, you'll see the body ly ng half digested and in bits. Well I've seen these flytraps in Ari ona with leaves eight and ten feet long, and thorns or teeth a foot or more. "Jt's about the death of Joe Haw kins I was going to tell you 'bout as queer a think, I reckon, as yon ever . heard tell on. There wasn't no body In Arizona or New Mexico as didn't know of Joe Hawains 'Ala bama Jo ' as be was called there. A reg'lar out-and-outer, be was; about a I ard a ease as erer man clapt eyes oo. ' Ml him, and he war worse nor blizzard. I'va seen him empty his is-shooter in a crowd as chanced to Jostle him a goto' into Simpson's bar when there was a dance on; and be bowied Tom Hooker 'cause he spilt Ills ii nor over bis weakit by mistake. ' ' Kew, at tbe time I am tellin' ye on, treo Joe Hawkins was swaggerln' . shoot tba town and layin' down by laws with his sbootin' Irons, there . ' 'eras an Engl shman there ot the . Savrue of Tom Scott This chap Scott ' car a Britisher U his boot-heels and ; , Trt be didn't freeze much to tbe Hrit , . l ieet there, or, rather, they didn't much to him. He was a quiet, e man, fleutt was rather too .lit for a tough set like that He r biases! f mostly apart an" didn't jrttn with nobody so long as he Jeft alone Baa luck or good, t MM kept a stiff Up oo him. ' KOrttwata sort o" butt among )9t Art? da for he was so ' 1 1&4 simple like. :ied la Simjeoa's bar. if-J ot of the other zS n tte Britishers f 1 Oaf their rarMelaf jtntkkie , , pa loungio' about and Tom Scott stand in' alone before tbe stove. Joe sat down by the table and put his revol ver and bowie down in front of him. Them's my argiments, Jeff.' he says to me, 'if any white-livered Britishw dares give me the lie -I tried to stop him: but be weren't a man as you could easily turn, and he began to speak in a war as no chap could stand. Wny, even a Greaser would Care up if you said as much about Greaserlaod: There was a com mo tion at the bar and eery man laid his hands on his wepins: but afore they could draw we beard a quiet voice from the stove: '.ay your pray ers, Joe Hawkins; for you're a dead man" ' J e turned around and looked like grabbin' for his irwn. But it weren't no use. Tom Scott was standing up, covering him with his Derringer; a smile on his white face, but tbe very devil shining in bis eyes tj'lt ain't that the old country has served me I over-well.' he says, 'but no man shall ; insult it before me and lire!' For a second his finger tightened round the trigger, and then he gave a laugh, i and threw the pistol on the floor. ' No,' he says: '1 can't shoot a half- drunken man: Take your dirty life, i Joe, an' use it b tier nor you have j done:' He swung contemptuously) round, and relit h:s half-smoked pipe , from the stove; while Alabama slunk : out ' thf bar, with the laughs of the Brittishers ringing in bis ears I saw bis face as be passed me, and on it I saw murder,- sirs murder, as plain as ever 1 ieed an thing in my life' 'I tayed in the bar after the row, and watched Tom Scot' as be shook bands with the men about. It seethed kinder queer V) me to see him smil n' and cheertul-like; for 1 knew Joe's blo:xithirsty mind, ami that the Eng lishman had small chance of ever seeing tbe morning. He lived in an out-of-thc-waort of place, you see clean o'l the trail, an I bad to pass through the Flytrap Gulch to get to" it. This here gulch was a marshy, gloomy place, lonely enough during the day een for it were always a creepy sort o' thing to see the great eight and ten-foot leaves snapping up if aught touched them; but at night there was never a soul near. Some parts of the marsh, too, were soft and eep, and a body thrown in would be gone by the morning. I could see Alabama Joe crouchin' under the leaves of the great flytrap in the darkest part of the gulch, with.a scowl on his face and a re volver in his hand. I could see It, sirs, as plain as with my two eye. "'Bout midnight Simpson shuts up his bar, so out we had to go. Tom Scctt started oil for his three-mile walk at a slashing puce. I just dropped him a bint, as he passed me, for 1 kinder liked the chap 'Keep your Ierringer there or about it ' I says, -for you might chance to need it' He looked round at me with his quiet smile, and then 1 lost sight of bim in the gloom. 1 never thought to see bim again. He'd hardly gone afore Simpson come up to me and says: There'll be old hell in tbe Flytrap Gulch to-night. Jeff. The boys say that Hawkins started half an hour ago to wait for Scott and shoot him on sight 1 rale' late the Coroi er '11 le wanted to morrow." " ha pas ed in the gulch that night? it was a question as were asked pretty free next morning. A half-1 reed was in fergu-on's store after day bieak, and he said as he'd chanced to be near the gulch 'bout i In the morning. It warn't easy to get at Irs story, he seemed so uncom mon scared but he told us. at last, as he'd heard the fearfuilest scream in the stillness of the night There weren't no shots, he said, but scream after scream kinder murl'.ed, like a man with a serape over his bead, an in immortal ;:ain. Abner Brandon and me, and a few more, was in the store at the time; so we mounted and rode out to. Scott's house, passing through the gulch on the way. There weren't nothiDg partic'lar to be seen there no blood nor marks of a tight, nor nothing, and when we gets up to Scott's house, out he comes to meet us as fresh as a lark. 'Hullo, Jeff" says he, 'no need for the pi-tols, after all! ome in an' ha-e a cocktail, boys.' 'Did ye see or hear nothing as ye come home last night?' says L 'No,' says he; 'all was quiet enough. An owl kinder moaning in the Fly trap Gulch that was all. Come, jump off and have a glass.' Thank ye,' says Abner. So off we gets, and Tom Scott rode into the settlement with us when we went back. "An all 11 red commotion was on in Main street as we rode into it The 'Merican party seemed to have gone clean crazed. Alabama Joe was gone not a darned particle of him left. Since he went out to the gulch nary eye had seen bim. As we got off our horses, there was a considerable crowd In front of Simpson's, and some ugly looks at Tom Scott, I can tell you There was a click I u' of pistols, and I saw as Scott had bis band Id his bosom, too. There weren't a single English face about -Stand aside, Jeff Adams." says - ebb Huraphrey.as great a scoundrel as erer lived; you hain't got no hand In this game. Sa), boys, are we, free Americans, to be murdered by this sort o' scum?' It was the quickest thing as erer 1 seed There was a rush, an' a crack; ebb was down with Scott's ball in his thigh, an' Scott hlsself was on tbe ground with a dozen men Holding mm. it weren't io rue struggling, so he lay quiet They seemed a bit uncertain what to do with him at flrst, but then owe of Alabama's special ehaasa pat tbeat up to It Joe's goes,' he said, lag ain't surer onr ttat; aa Caere Ilea the. maa ee kiltej Ua. Caca on you ktawi as Joe waotM tootteei to tal MxHsff I?: airti Ft rrttferr i l ,X"....Cf1 r to Its wic'-lJt t- - V,j uJp v VX-rl rltrmratsSt caa dl kae rc v j la t J ' Hiurrjc .oCUe4oa saHret for t:-y icy rv, .tt j!jjcxxcua X3 ?.:: . poor Joe some o hi sneakln' tricks. an' thrown blm into the swamp. It ain't no wonder as the body is gone But air we to stan' by and see Kn glisb murder in' our own cbums? 1 guess not Let Jedge Lynch try huu; that's what I say.' Lynch him:' snouted a hundred angry voices for all the rag-tag an' bobtail o tbe settlement was round us by this tim-j. -Here, bo s. fetch a rooe an' swing him up: I p with him over Simpson's door." "See here, though.' ' says another, coming forrards: "let's hang him by ibe great riyirap in the giuch. Let Joe see as he's revenged, : it so be as he's buried 'bout there:' There was a shout for this, an' away jtheywtnt with Scott tied on his ' mustang in the middle, and a i mounted guard, with cocked revol I vers, round bim: for we knew as there : was a score or so Britisheis about as didn't seem t'j know any jedfc'eof that , partic'lar name. "I went out them, my heart bleedin' for Scott though he .didn't seem a c-nt put out he didn't J Je were game to tne backbone, .-eems kinder queer, sir, bangin' a man to a flytrap; but our'n were a reg'lar tree and the leave like a brace of boats with a hinge ltween 'era and thorns at the tiottoni. '-We passed down the gulch to the place where tbe great one grows, and there we seed it, with the leaves. some open, wiue shut But we se-d soineihiiig worse nor that Standin' round ng the tree was some twenty men Britishers all, an' armed to the teeth. They was wailing for us, evidently, an' had a business-like look aUiut em, as if they'd come for something and meant t have it There was the raw material there for aUiutas warm a sen u, midge as ever J seeu. "As we r'Kle up, a great red-bea-ded Scotch man Cameron wre his name stood out afore the rest his re volver cocked in his hand. 'See here, boys', he says, 'you've got no call to hurt a hair of that man's head. ou hain't proved as Joe is dead yet: and If you had, you hain't proved as Scott killed him. Anyhow, it were in self defense; for you ail know as be was lying in wait for Scott to shoot him on sight So. 1 say agin, you hain't got no rail to hurt that man; and what's more, I've got twenty six barreled argument against your doin' it 'It's an interesting pint and worth arguln' out' said tbe man as was Alabama Joe's special chum. There was a clickin'of pistols, and a loosenin' of knives, and the two parties began to draw up to one an oth r. an' it looked like a rise in the mortality of Arizona. Scott was standing iiehind with a pistol at bis car if he stirred, iooKin' quiet and couii(sed as having no money ou the table; when sudden he gives a start an' a shout as rang iu our cars like a trumpet 'Joe" he cried, Joe: Look at him.' in the flytrap'.' We all turned an' looked where he was pointin'. Jerusalem.' I think we won't get that picter out of our minds agin. One of tbe great leaves of the flytrap, that had been shut and touch In' the ground as it lay, was slowly rolling back upon its hinges. There lying like an oyster in its shell, was Alabama Joe, in the hollow 'of the leaf: The great borns bad been slowly driven through his heart as it shut upon him! We could see as he'd tried to cut his way out for there was a slit in the thick fleshy leaf, an' his bowie was in his hand; but t had smothered him first He'd lain down on it likely to keep the damp off while he were a-wa tin' for scott, and it had closed ou him as you've -cen your little hothouse nes do on a I'y: and there he were, as we found him, torn and mashed, and crushed into pulp, by the great jauged Ueth ot the man-e.itin' piant There, sirs, I think you'.l own that as a curious story. Ltica iIobe. Meditrval Mathematicians. Tartaglla discovered the solution of cubic e juations. (Jardan employed toward bim ail the persuasions in his power to obtain a communication to himself of the famous dlsccvery. "I swear to you on the holy Gospels," he promised, "that if you teach me your discoveries I will never publish them, and will, besides, record them for myself in cipher, so that no one shall be a le to understand them after my death" Tartaglla, trusting in Cardan's good faith, communicated to him his rules, summarized in twenty-seven mnernoteebnic verses, in three strophes of nine verses each. Cardan, assisted by bis pupil Ferrari, suc ceeded in extending tbe rules, solved e juations of t le fourth degree, and published tbe whole in Tbe Ars Mag na Tartaglla, Irritated at tbe algetraist astrologer's violation of his word, fell Into a violent rage lie sent to bis enemy, according to tbe fashion of the time, several chal lenges, and In one of them went so far as to threaten Cardan and his pupil that be would wash their beads together and at the same time, "a thing which no barber In .taly could Ida" Cardan finally agreed to attend a deputation, which was to be held In a church in Milan on the 10th of August, 1544. He did not appear, but sent bis pupil Ferrari Ferrari bora bis part In the contest al ne, ! and the arialr would ba e resulted in favor of Tart iglia If the hostile atti tude or Cardan's friends had ! caused bin to leave Milan by a not by road, The Popular Science Monthly. VsluMt Poi Wfclna. The skla ot a silver fox. otherwise called Mack lot, varies la price from f f to 1200, The whole number ob iJaed aanrsaily aasonatt to only '..m, ot which amouat 1,009 are las psfttf Iota EealatJ. La Iloustaa eiattlakUateasla of the NEWSPAPER SCIENCE. atay LaaUrraaa MaiaaHali Caaaa Fnamlar CraaWaca. An Item is going toe rounds of tbe pre. to theefiectibat t the Fans Ex petition of l&OO, among the objects of curiosity will be a telescope which will apparently bring th moon to within a yard of the earth 'In other words, we will be able t observe the moon about as we do tbe world around us. Ou which the National Druggist vi ry aptly comments thus: ' To anyone acqua oled with the rudiment of optics, this is so absurd that it would scarcely merit contra diction: but unfortunately, the great bulk of newspaper readers know nothing of optics, and care less; and, alo unfortunately, the human being is proosi to accept as true anything that smacks of the marvelous the more marvelous the readier men are to believe. Tbe laws reuulatiog the amplifica tion of an image in a compound in strument like the telescope are fixed, and enable us to calculate with great exactness the foeal length of an eye piece, and of the object glass, whose combined effects shall give any de sired amplification. Not to go into the scientific discussion of these principles, we will state, as a fixed rule the application depends upon the focal length of the eye-piece and that of the object glass the shorter the former the shorter the latter arid b'-nt e, of the length oi the tube nece-sary to attain any given am plification. The formula foi ascer taining tne magnifying power of a teiesco. roughly stated, is re, where F is the focal length of the object gla-s, and e that of the eye-piece Let us admit for argument's salte, that at '.he end of the ce itury cngl neering skill and tnanufacturi. g facilities wiil have readied a point at which the construction of a lube or body for the telescope, ot any de sired length and diameter say 600 miles long will be a mere bagatelle. Let us also suppose that by that time opticians will be able to construct ob,ect glasses of any desired diame ter, and eye-pieces of any desired shortness of focus. Let us take 1-25 incb as the focal length of the eye piece (many times shorter than at present possible), which will give an amplification (roughly) of 300 times the image made by object glass. The moon is approximately 2,'!8,.rj00 miles away from us, or say 42O.OO0.UO0 yards. To b. ing her to tbe apparent distance of one yard, with an eye piece of 1-25 inch focal distance, would therefore require a tube length of about 42H,000 yards or say liOO miles. The object glass would have to be (roughly speaking) about twenty-six miles In diameter. We! think that the reader will agree with us that this is beyond even tbe pos sibilities of fin dc siecle engineering and optica! skill. A Sncceaaftil Irly, j The party was given at a fa nj-j bou-e, and alout thirty couples were present I told the fanner when I ! first arriv d that I sbou d depend upon bim to give at least five min ute,' notice iK-fon; any shooting b gan, and he leplied: "I'll do it; I shall be watchln out and I t.hi k I can give yo'pcotv of tlm ; to get out of rao'e." There will be shooting, of course'.'" "Oh, certainly. The boys would feel that they had slighted me if there wasn't a row.'' What do the women folks do when the shoot ng logins'" Sit rih'ht down on the floor till it's all over. Don't be a bit oucasy. I'll give yo' plenty of warnin'." There wns only one lid iter, and he was also the caller. His calls .u zlcd me at first, but no one else appeared to mind it as he drawled: "Right and left on tbe head, and Bill Taylor don't want to drop that revolver on the floor: Balance four and half-promenade, and Jim Hender son has a knife in his boot-legl Ladies change, and Luke Williams is aching to pick a furse with Tom Bebee: All balance to partners, and when the bhoolio' begins please re member that the fiddler never takes sides:" We had been dancing about an hour and evi rybody s em d to be thoroughly good-natured and at peace with all mankind, when tbe tanner beckoned to me and whispered: "I said I'd give yo' five minutes warnin', but I'm two minutes behind time: Break fer the barn!" 1 broke, but was not oer thirty feet from tbe door when the shooting began. It lasted about five minutes, and 1 cautiously returned to the bouse to hear the fiddler calling in the same old monotonous voice: Taae partners for Virginia reel and don't make sich a furse over three men wounded! First lady and gent fora:d and back and Bill Taylor has gone after a doctor! Forward again and sasha, and somebody attend to that gal In hysterics: Swing with tbe right now with the left and if this Isn't the most successful dance of the season then you folks needn't pay me a cent!" Detroit Free Press. KncoaraglBg. The late Marshal MacMahon was not a good off-hand speaker. There was a colored cadet In the St Cyr Military Academy, and once, when the Marshal reviewed tbe corpi, the Instructor suggested that he should say soaMtblag to encourage tbe blac i man. . - Let him stand forth, " said tbe Marshal. " Ho you are a darky, are ront" be said to tbe eadst " rat, Marshal. " trail, keep it up." Tvdrjt afraid their eaa cbeC.tJ Kee about theat, bat ctlar f- "5M far ttoos who facta t Jl &l ta trek. THE "COMMODORE" SIGNED. A (tea bHmt Abawt 014 VaaaterMIt aad a aWvolrar. Id the days of tbe California gold fe er old Commodore" Vaoderbilt owned a fast line of steamers between New Vora and Aspiowali, at which place they connected with a line run ning to San Francisco. One day, while the boom was on, Commodore ('. K. Garrison made a contiact with Vanderiiilt to buy tbe fast line. But while tbe contract was preparing for signature and transfer auderbilt received information that caused him to tlieve that he bad sold out too cheap So when the papers were brought to him for signature lie de clined to ratify the bargain. Four days after this Garrison came Into Vanderbilt's office again, sev eral people were there, but he waited until they bad all gone. Then he took from bis pocket a roll of papers. "Commodore Vaoderbilt" be said in a calm, even tone. "I've brought you that contract selling your line of ships from New )ork to Aspinwall and from l'anama to San Francisco for you to sign this morning. 1'lease look over it and see if ll is correct" and Garrison unfolded tbe papersand laid tbeui down before Vanderb It The old man's face turned as red as fire. He shoved the papers to one side, and in a voice hoarse with an ger, said: "By , this and by that 1 thought I toid you tbe other day that I wouldn't ratify that contract and I won't Now, that's the end of it" and be roughly threw the paiiers to ward Capt Garrison. Tbe latter picked them up off the floor and arranged them without a word. He then started for the door. But instead of going out he locked It put tbe key in his pocket and walked back to Vanderbilt who was watch ing blm with some curiosity. He carefully spread out the papers again before the other man. and drawing a six-inch Infringer he cocked it and held it within a foot of Vanderbilt's rigbt ear. "Commodore Vanderbilt" said he slowly, '-do you see that clock on the mantel? It Is now Ave minutes to 11. If, wheo that clock has tinished the stroke of 1 1, you have not signed that contract, by G , I will blow your brains all over this floor." There was a dead silence. Vander bilt turned ery pale. He knew his man. The clock sounded tick, tick. It was three minutes, then two. then one minute of II. "Good God!" thought Mr. Vanderbilt "must I be murdered right here with no chance for my life:"' The wheels of the clock began their whir preparatory to striking the hour. Before the flrst stroke bad rung out Vanderbilt seized the pen before him and by the third note of tbe hour he had written his name to the contract Then Garrison uncocked f-be deadly pistol and nut it in his rocket He took tbe papers, walked to the door and unlocked It. "Commodore," he said, "i shall never tell of what occurred here this morning." From that time, though tney passed ea h other daily on tbe street and sat in the same Isiard of direc tors, tbe two men never exchanged a word. A Itig Blue Graas Family. "A specimen of what Kentucky can do in the way of producing stalwart sons and daughters," said a proud native of the Blue Grass country, "I might mention the old Joe Morrison family of Lou, bon (Xiunty. Anybody of the present generation who ever lived in Kentucky will remember old Joe Morrison's family. The family consisted of Joe and his wife and six sons and three daughters Joe stood i! feet 4 In his stock inns, and weighed -lo pounds. His wife was the same height exactly, but she weighed 2tiii pounds. The oldest son Tom, was also U feet 4, and he weighed 2Hii , ounds. Jim topped bis brother Tom two inches in height, but he wasn't as heavy by tcventy pounds. Their sister Sarah was a slim girl, weighing only IM pounds, I ut she could look over the heads of both Tom and Jim, for she stood feet i inches "But John was the bl boy of the family. He only lacked an inch of I e ng seven feet higlt, and he weighed .'too pounds. Sister Mary was a midget ot six feet two, and only weighed 149 pounds. Kll.ah wasn't very tall, either, ling the same he gut as his st-ter Mary, but he was ofptetty fair belt tipping the scales at Matthew was sii feet two, also, and weighed 220, while r.ll, standing six feel four weighed less lhau 2oo. The youngest girl, Martha, was six feet three and I no pounds iu weight She would undoubtedly have been the giant of the family, for that was her height and weight at the age of I ', a few weens before she died. When these measurements were taken, a few ."ears ago, the family was altogether Mil since then old Joe and bis wife have died, and the boys and girls were married and scat tered aiout the State. I don't know what their progeny have done 10 keep up tbe famll.' reputation as to size, but I'll bet on 'em to rfeep up the 'ocord." A Brltiah Whalcbaclt. The enterprise of British ship owners is evidenced by their adopt ing experimentally any type of vessel calculated to cheapen transit and thus lessen tbe price of food, despite the prejudice of the "tyrannical per manent department' of our Govern ment referred to by Lord Salisbury An illustration of this is afforded by the fact that a local shipowners has now a veritable wbaleback afloat and running, though be is prevented from sail ng her under the British flag bv the absurd restrictions of oar Board of Trade.- With this board the ecrlehas of the bartee W. Wetmore twlet m IE the Atlaatle aad going rwt-4 Vl Horn, besides the numerous similar vessels carrying tbe densest and most trying cargoes on the American lakes, goes for nothing; they simply say: "We can not stop your build ing such a type of, vessel, but we shall not permit ou to sail b r out of a British port beyond such and such a draught" which practically meant that the vessel can not earn a living freight However, under the agis of the lag of a neighboring foreign country, she is freely aide to load full cargoes between the northern portion of the Continent of Furope and tbe .Mediterranean, betwe-eo which ports she has already made one successful voyage,, and is now prosecuting a sec nd, demonstrating that for her tonnage she can carry a heavier cargo thau any other type of vessel and that was wbat called the type intoex istence but that she can net carry so great a bulk of cargo as a vessel built on the English model. London Mer cury. Klrctrlo Flalira. About fifty species ot fishes have len found to possess electrical organs, but their electrical proper ties have been studied in detail only in Ave or six. The best known are various species of torpedo (belonging to the skate family) loucd in the Mediterranean and Adriatic seas, the Gymnotua. an eel found in the la goons in the region of tne Orinoco, in Snuih America: tbe Malapterurus, the raash, or thunderer fish of tbe Arabs, a native of the Nile, tbe the Niger, tbe Senegal, and other African rivers, and various species ot skates (ltala) found in our own seas. It Is curious that the Nile is rich in eleciricaljlshes. several species of pike-like v creatures (Mormyrus and Hyperopisus) possessing electrical organs the structure of which has been quite recently investigated by I ritsch. The electrical fishes do not belong to any one class or group, and some are found In fresh water, while others inhabit the ocean. Two distinct types of electrical or gans exist One is closely related In structure to muscle, as found in the torpedo, gymnolus. and skate, while the other presents more of the char acters of the structure of a secreting gland, as illustrated by the electric organ of the thunderer llsh. Both types are built up of a vast number of minute-Indeed, microscopical elements, and each element is sup plied with a nerve fiber. These nerv fibers come from large nerves that originate in the nerve centers b.aln or spinal cord and in these centers we find special large nerve cells with which the nerve titers of the electric organ are con ne -ted and from which they spring. We may therefore consider the whole electric apparatus as consisting of three parts: (1) Flcctrlc centers in the brain or spinal cord, (2) ele trie nerves passing to the electric organ, ana (.1) the electric organ itself. It mut not be suppose ', howe er, that the electricity is generated In the electric centers, and that it Is con veyed by the electric nerves to the electric organ. On the contrary, it is generated in the electric organ it self, but is only produced so as to give a "shock" when it Is set in action by nervous Impulse trnsmit te i to it from the nerve c nters bv the electric nerves The Fortnightly Beview. Keata ot Iearnlni(. "We usually think of the cities as centers of cultivation," said a college professor recently, "but my observa tion convinces me that there is more reading do e in the farm-houses thaa there is in the city." Undoubtedly this gentleman wa right i eading habits are the ex ception rather than The rule among the majority of people in the cities. These people are "too busy to read," but not too busy to go to theaters, or 1 ase ball matches, or promenade tbe streets. The life of the city is unfavorable to reading habits. The people of the farm are very busy, too, and generally regret that so little time Is left them for the im p ovement of their minds. Neverthe less, few farm houses are unprovided with periodicals of various sorts. Many farmers' families possess ex cellent books of their own, with sets of encyclopedias in which they are accustomed to "look up" subjects. The state of things on tbe farm, especially In the winter, encourages evening reading instead of discour aging it His a change from the farm work a delightful peep into a new world. The farmer who wishes his boys and i-'irls to acquire habits of reading can cultivate in them these habits nowhere so well as in his own sitting room or living-room. Books from the village library, good periodicals regularly subvert bed for or taken with reading clubs, and a book now and then bought with tbe children's own earnings, will lie read eagerly, if the home surroundings are made pleas ant The president of a greatcolleae has said that the most that a college education can do for a man is to teach him h w to read, and In these days of Chautauqua circles and uni versity extension, no ono need go to the great cities to acquire the essen tials of cultivation. Youth's Com panion. ilrafta During the Civil War. There were five drafts in' the Northern States. Tbe tlrst was or dered August 4, 1862. The sec nd draft was authorized by the a t of March 3, Itf3; It began in July of that rear, and caused the terrible draft or July riots In New York City, Biwtoo, and elsewhere. The third drait legaa In April, lcJ; the fourth la August, tbe orth aad. last, in I e- eomver or w same y a J. m ' . L Tokxa Is a eertam fasti nation ab&a watebiu uea ictrer caa withstand. no V', . , 'f 'A r K r f ' -1 I J ' 1