rorns OF TIIK T1.MES. A CHOICE SELECTION OF TERESTINC IT5MS. IN- Inanikv has liopn made to cover a multitude of ius. cut the piact.ee Is Incoming very tiresome. Tiik Fremh crisis is ended. The reader should not, Ik. we er, conclude ttut F rance is entirely out of crisis;-. Tiik men who wear Ion coats and who walK fast in them, aie no longer in position to laugh at the woman runs. way a I i I'ki I't.K whom we have thought ail summer were very polite, are be ginning to hold the door wide open when they go out. That cigarette crusade, by which it Is Imped to prevent Itiys from in haling the noxious rolls, will prole ably all end In smoke. A m silk man who never takes bis mother or iter to th theater is very Indignant when he sees a mar ried man there alone. A s tiikhk are none w wiik that we may venture to Injure them Willi Irupuu ty, so there are none so low j that they may not at some time be j able to repay an obligation. There-: fore, what benevolence would die- ' tale, prudence would confirm. j At the Hoston School biy's-oclety's recent reunion Joseph 1. Jones gave his reminiscences as a schoolboy In Hoston rilnety-'wo years ago. He is 07 years old. No! ody can IjC a mcm tr of the society w ho has not been out of school a full half-century. IIcman wisdom makes as 111 use of her talent when she exercises it in re Hrinding from the number and sweet ness of those, pleasures thatare natur ally our due. as she employs It favor ably and well in artificially disguising and trl king out the Ills of life to alleviate the sense of thorn. Sisck the war liegan In I'.razil the correspondents have killed more men, shelled more towns and destroyed more Ironclads than could le found in any other country under the sun. The queerest thing about it all Is that the royalists and revolutionists have still sufficient soldiers to carry on the lighting. """ Is building the modern house, there is not enough attention paid to the cellar. Old-fashioned people had cellars that would hold enough pota ties, cabbage, apples, turnips etc, stored in the fa 14- when they were cheapest, to keep the family ail win ter. They not only saved money, but got the best 1,'Ni'M'Ai. sequela; of diphtheria have been made manifest in I!en frew (bounty, Canada Diphtheria was prevalent there last year and In every family whero there arc chil dren who had lecn victims of diph theria nearly all are suffering from an a fTectlon very much like whooping rough. Those su cririg from it cough until they are black in the face. A ot'NTitYJi as took his seat at a hotel table opposite a gentleman who was indulging In a bottle of wine. Supposing the wine to le common property, our unsophisticated country friend helped himself to it with the gentleman's glass 'That's cool!" exclaimed the owner of the tiottle of wine, indignantly. "Yes," replied the other, "I should think there was Jce in It." Tins country has become within three decades oiks of the most imHjr taot olive consuming countries in the world. When olives were Imported into the I'liltcd States thev were a luxury of the rich. They are still consumed in cities rather than In the country district s: and New York, with Its great imputation of people from the Medlterranean'reglons Is, of all American cities, by far the great est consumer of ollvea A wMKwiiAT unusual engineering teat has Just been accomplished at the Hons cor Spinning Works, at Nancy, France. Without stopping the works for a single day the height of a chimney about a hundred feet high was Increased thirty feet. The first workman to reach the top of the chimney gained that height by driving Iron hooks lctwccn the crease of the bricks. He then hauled on his scaffolding. It oc- i..t. ii,t. iavs- t.lm to do the work. Wiikn one paranoiac commits mur der for the love of notoriety of being hung a down will commit it on the supposition that they will escape strangulation on the lawyer's plea of doing It under an Insane impulse, while at the same time they will en Joy the notoriety of the bloody deed, the trial, and the acquittal on the Josanlty dodge. If they are executed with promptitude and inexorable certainty othe cranks will Dot I e so i.tti fe k notoriety by committicg murder to ;ic ;Uire it; and the fas'er those paranoiac are removed froni the eaith the fewcrsucb . p!e there will l.e to go on marrying and breed i g moral monsters impelled to take life for sake of morbid notoriety, t-elf-prc-ervation of sane jeople is more importance to society than propagation of paranoiac. Tiik popular belief that the Indians are a doomed we and are rapidly di-apearing Is not borne out by the ,eoitof the Secretary of the In- terior. ing in Ile savs they are not de- reas. number. On the contrary, "t ibal wars and wars with the whites having ceased, they - are increasing rather, than decreasing." All the greater, therefo e is the need of their le us s i cared for and so trained that t: ey will become useful citizens. In manv caes this seems ,t hopeless pro-pect, but if the children are rightly dcait with the outlook for the future is l.y no means altogether dis couraging. I ft politics be elimina ted from the management, of tiie In dian and let Civil i-emce principles prevail in the Ind an service, and two most important, steps toward the solution of the Indian problem will lie taken. Tiik ridiculously low prices at ' which World's Fair buildings are -old 1 is a feature of the closing events of j the fair which the most sagacious ! speculators in salvage values had nol I anticipated. It was supposed that I the World's Fair struct ires proper J would have b ought at leat a mill j ion dollars in the market, and that I the Stale and foreign buildings would I have brought something at least near i the cost of the materials. Instead of that the fairy I ireclory nlTcrs t.;e buildin s and Jjim.i on bonus t t e South Park Hoard merely to get. rid ot them. The other buildings are sold at prices that arc but a small percentage on their cost. The .Mid way palaces were bought for a : ounts less than the value of the lumber for kindling wood. There was no de mandno market tor the materials of which the buildings were con structed. The wreckers liought them at nominal prices and will have U use up the rubbish gradually In their contracts with those erecting build ings. Tiikhk is a ways something coarse and vulgar In a breach-of-promlsc case, The nature of such nulls is revealed by theoid Fnglish pleadings; the father ol the girl was the plain HIT, and he sued per uuod servltium amlsit, it lelng assumed as a matter of course that Kngll-h g rls did cook. ing and washing for their papas. Those who are (urious about that branch of legal practice should read the rejiorts of the cases In which Ilroiighman and Erskine were usually pitied against each . other; they will arise from the perusal with a curious impression of the English middle class a century ago. The notion of those days was that the sole honor able destiny of a girl was to bo the wife of some man and the mother ol his children. If she could not at tain this destiny, her life was a fail ure, and if she could charge the failure on any one, she was quite right to sue him for damages. An idea has been gaining ground in this country of laie years that women may possibly have other destinies; that there are avenues of usefulness for spinsters, with perhaps as much promise of happiness as Is offered in the average married Ufa As last a new occupations are discovered foi women an 1 self-support is brought nearer their reach, this Idea ac Uiref stiength. When it becomes general breach-of -promise suits will cease tc encumber the court calendars. Hut the fact remains that the female re formers who demand ''equality of the sexes," only want it when It come their way. There Is probably not a woman In the 1'nited States who doc: not agiee with the doctrine just laid down by a New York court con cernlng engagements of marriage. Hut, correspondingly, there Is prob ably not one. either, who would give damages to a man who brought suit against a woman for breach of prom isc W here, then, does trie 'Equality of the sexes" come In? Women ox f Jimlener. Women in America apcar to successful in making a business gardening. One lady in Mississippi has started a good business in ship ping rosebuds submerged in water, thereby making them retain their i freshness. Another In California ' two orchards, of ten and twelve n.Md lit mm if uhlti aha crmura nnrl co s and cherries so successfully that they net her .",000a year. A widow In the same State, who was once the reigning belle In her town, Is at the head of a cut-flower industiy. She has twenty acres of violets and chrys anthemums; In her chrysanthemum plantation alone she has 18,000 blooms this year. "I'm stuck on you," the chewing gum said to the boarding-school man teln eon. MEN OF MILLIONS NE.'.R DEATH. itu,Brkallr f: !- More the AtK-iiipl to Mow l'p MuMrll Hag. "Quite a number of meu of mil lions have had narrow escapes from sudden d. atli during the past year or so," remarked a Wall street man to .1 writer for the New York World. "I ; was reminded or the fact a few davs a.'o by the repo.t in the new-papers of the narrow escaie Ceorge (iould , hi 1 from a quick death by the pre mature discharge of his gun while minting in the Adirondacks. Kussell fsage started the hall rolling by escap ing the bomh of Noreross. .Mr. ."-age had a narrow escape, indeed, but not more so than did William K. Yauder hilt, who barely saved himself a year ago when his big yacht, Alva, went down at night Cornelius Yander biit just escaped death from a tram of cars ab ut the same time Then John W. Mackay, the California bo nauza king, was shot at and wound ed by Kipey, a San Fraric sco crank w ho fancied he had been wronged by the money king. C. T. erker, the hicago cable king, was In a rail road wreck out West snortly arter Mr. Mackay's escape from being mur dered. A passenger sitting in front of .Mr. Yerkes was instantly killed, mt t he ca le king got out of the wreck without a scratch. Ldd.e ould is reported to nave had a nar row eseaie trom death at the hands of one or the iiulTalo Jlailroad strik ers a year ago while doing guard duty with the Seventh l.egiment. l.eorge anderhilt was almost drowned j,, 1 the private bath at Newport a short tiiu .iiT.i lln vu'ja rniienpfl tiv A. vn,r t.i.e r, wsr,a.,rs reported. ! J ' "- r John Jacob Astor had a narrow es- ; ,..,,,..... H hiu tmr-ht in u ei ill isinri I In New York water recently, and a Up' Ul1'UIU I I I .J J UV-Oli w -s- " ' - " , son of Cornelius Vanderbilt, jr., was so.iouslv in u red while following the hounds at .Newport, his horse falling ind throwing him against a wall. Men of millions are lucky in other things than making money, you see. She Wrote Too Well. In an after-dinner talk, ;.s iciKirt- ed by the Ho ton Transcript, a lady, whose handwriting has never driven he,- pu Mistier to reuuest. the use of a typewriter, told a most amusing story of what happened once, because she wrote a hand as finished and legi ble as copperplate. While she was in England, at a friend's country h use, a lormer maidservant wrote to her hostess, requesting a written character." The hostess was glad to comply with the request, but be ing for the moment much engaged, she aski-d her visitor to write the "character" from her dictation. About a fortnight later, we were interrupted at au afternoon lea ny the parlor maid, who said that sarah the one to whom the "character" had been sent was in the ball, in charge of a policeman, crying bitterly and begging to see Mrs. , . mv hostess. We went to the hall Logetner, and found the girl In an agonv of shame and distress. "() ma'am, " said she, "1 applied at Lady Oraywhacke's for a situation, heailn' as how a maid was wanted. "Her ladyship asked for my char acter; and 1 showed her, immediate. 1 he one you was kind enough to semi me, ma'am. Anil she looked ai it awh.le, then she touched a bell, and said to the footman: '"Send for a pleceman at once!' says stie. j his gin is Using a lauy name without her permission,' says she. -She has hired n unc professional clerk or accountant to write out this paper, with Mrs. 's name in it,' says she. 'No lady ever wrote such a hand as that" says she, Only peo ple who write for a living write such a hand,' says she and that's how I know it is a forgery!' "Well, ma'am, I cried, and 1 stuck to It before her and the pleeceman that you'd sent me this paper just as she saw it. And at last she told the pleeceman to bring me down here, in charge, and get your word for it. ma'am. And ( 1 ma'am, you'll sjieak for me?" My friend spoke for her to such purpose that the good-natured Hobby was soon on his way to London. The girl was comforted with the assur ance that, in addition to the message which the policeman was to take, she should have a decisive letter, in 111 y friend's own handwriting "which is bad enough to be a duchess's." said she. The most truly English part of the whole queer matter is that after Lady Craywhaekc's outrageous insult to the xor unoffending girl, the girl meekly and gratefully went Into her service, ami has continued there these ten years. W timed In Tlrnr. It was the Hilic.y of the pioneers, says the chronicler of West irginia history, to cultivate as far as practi cal the friendship of the numerous tribes or Indians on the west side of the Ohio River. As a natural conse quence of hospitalities repeatedly ex tended to the Mingoes and VV'vau dottes, a feeling of good will existed in many Instances between these trilies and the whites. In the case of the ane brothers and the Wyan doltcH, this friendliness was Increa-ed by the adoption of Isaac 'ane by the tribe, and his residence among them. Among the personal mends ol Jon athan Zanc was a Wyandotte warrior of great sie and courage, known as Captain Jack. One evening about iH'dtime Mr. Zane and his wife were surprised by an unexected call from Captain Jack. Mrs. ane, 11s was her custom, ((Hiked venison and prejiared a sup per, but when the Indian was Invit ed to cat, he refused and sat in grim silence. This unusual Isjhavior foreboded 111, I Faint heart never wen fair lady, and aroused the most serious fears in 1 and we cannot lust now put our fin the minds of the nnes. Had they gers on the Indy that ever won a faint offended the Indian, aid had he come heart j at that late hour to do them harm? t I Mr. ane moved near to his rule,1 and with a glance or the eye inlimat- ed to his wife to have the butcher j ! knife ready to aid in defending them- J j selves. i Meantime, Captain Jack sat gazing i into the tire lor a full halt-hour, speechless and motionless. At length he rose from hi.; seat, and fixing his keen eyes uron Mr. ane, he said: Jirot her, I eat salt in your house manv time, and many time you gi e me blanket to make me warm. In dian don't forget. You my I rothcr. I come t 1 tell you he killed liefo e morning. Indians come soon', leaf, now." He sat down, ate a few hurried mouthful of venison, asked for the pile, took a few whiffs, and then ex claimed, "(Jo (io to fort, quick!" and went hurriedly away. Mr aneand his wife seized suWi things as were within easy grasp, and ran Willi all speed toward the fort They were none loo soon, for scarcely were they half a mile on their way when, looking back, they saw their cabin In llames. Hut for C aptain Jack's timely warning, they would no doubt have lost their lives. A Miiiiiijg Opportunity Mifcse:!. "Speaking of gold excitements," said (ieorge W. Heal in the presence of a little social gathering in West Hark street a few evenings since, "reminds me of a chance I once had to purchase a placer claim in Con f( derate gulch. The men who owned the bar offered it to me for no cash and wereanxious to sell at that figure, but 1 hesitated. Finally I told them I w,lu!(1 liavR au exP'rt examine and . .!, ... .,,! ,f II "' ' was what be I would v-liey ic nem-im-u ii, u. lJun "1M5 it. This was satisfactory, tnd mv expert made the lest and re- 1 ported unfavorably upon it. That settled the deal, and 1 went on my way in search of ol her fields. About ( two month later 1 returned to Con federate gulch and found a six-mule ' team and a wagon behind it contain I ing two Urns or gold taken from a ! portion of the bur those men wanted ; to sell me for too. The team was ready to start for Fort Kenton with ! the gold and was surrounded by thirty ' armed men, who were to guard the 1 metal on the way. After I refu-ed i to purchase the ground the men con ! eluded to work it themselves and j from a spaa; of loo feet square had : taken t he two tons of gold. I have not seen the 'expert' since then." ! Hutte M iner. How lo You Cross Vonr "T's?" A graphologist has discovered that character can be lead from the letter "t" alone. He claims that the ver ticle line represents the fatality of life ahd the horizontal bar the influ ence! human will exercises over this I fatality. ' In addition, he claims that the iViigher or lower a writer crosses the y-t Is a guide to the amount of ' ideality contained in his nature and ; that the lower part of ttie letter cor responds to the practical and ma terial part of the man's character. For instance, the optimist crosses his t's with a line that slopes upward fiom the giound to the sky. as it were. The poet ! ten crosses bis t's quite above the verticie line: in other words, in the sky. The pessimist crosses his t's with a downward sloping stroke. The line which is below the ideal portion of the letter descends little by little un til it is lost among the sad realities or earthly existence. The practical man, it appears, al . ways steers a middle course, and ; crosses his t's neither in the ideal '. nor in the material manner, but ex actly midway between both. I Recognized Ills I-in 11 re. The newltookkeeper entered Hank er iiock's private office in a state of i great agitation. "There's a young man out there who says he's got to see you, sir. and 1 refuses to state what his business is. 1 1 I I'm a-afraid he a dangerous crank, sir." 'Tell him he can't see me unless he states tiie nature of his errand," said the banker nervously. The bookkeeper returned a mo ment later and whisperet' hoarsely: 'He says he must have some money." Hanker l ock's face blanched and as be slid silently into the great vault and swung the heavy door nearly to, he gasped: tj "Ask him how much he wauls." There was a moment of awful sus pense and then the trembling clerk returned. "lie says you better make it "00, and be - quick alioilt, it The great door swung open once more and the banker erne glng seized ache 'kbook. lemarking: "Only .'i00, eh.- Let me see it's the llrstof the month, ton! h, that's my son B11L Send him In; I want m talk to him." I I ill.infc t be Text s. A house in I'hil.idelpliia formerly occupied bv a (.ospel mission is now tcnated by a shoemaker, who has turned the former character 'if the place and the signs st ill remainingon the walls and windows to queer ad vertising account. One sign, a sam ple of all, reads: '-Cobbler's Mission. Soles saved and heels repaired." sThls sacrilegious transformation is paralleled in the case of a chapel in Hrooklyu, recently torn down to make way for street improvements. It was occupied for a few weeks be fore its demolition by a cheap cloth ing concern, and one of the mottoes, chiseled in marble over the main en trance, was altered by the addition of a word; "Come trade with us and we will do you good." New York Sun. KING OF ELEPHANTS. How Ho Boat Bruun' W!l! Animal Cmirhmr and th Dooy. j An interesting character sat chat ting in the reading-room of the United States Hotel on r ul. on Street one day la-t week, lie looked a'out i 0 years old. and his b.ou.ed face showed marks of exposure to the ele ments of many ciimes. To a small group of friends, who knew him as J. B. liaylord, for twenty Ave years a catcher of the .largest species of wild auimais for circuses, au i for many years Har- num s tnend and lareign agent, ne was telling of a thrilling exp rience w .lie attempting to capture wuat ne bel cved was the largest elephant in the world. I "I was in Hongkong, ready to leave ; for America wilh a cargo o.' lions, 1 t gers, and elephants," said he, j "when I received adi patch from Mr. Harnum informing me that Jumbo j was dead and directing me to go to i India at once and secure, regardless of cost or trouble, the largest ele- : phant to be found. 1 met my part-: ner, a nat ve, in alcutta, and we ; started away j We bad received word of the dis- I co very of th" largest elephant ever: seen in Southern India. He was; said to Is- fifteen feet high, to have ! lord 'd it over a large herd for many i years, and to be. the most ferocious e ephant ever encountered by the ! nati.es. I made up my mind to have , that elephant, no matter what the; risk or cost. Hut, as it turned out, I j came near losing my life in the at- ! tempt to capture Jupiter, the name 1 gave h m in fancy. We re;iehefl the eleriliant, country ! well provided with natives, decoy ele- ! piiants. and all necessary parapher nalia. We selected a spot near the stream to which Jupiter and his herd went to drink, and natives began build ing the trap in which we noped to catch the king elephant. When the walls of the corral had been com pleted we cut a path, gradually wid- t euing it from the mouth of the c ir- ral until it was 100 feet in width a quarter of a mile away. Its sides were built up of trees and heavy underbrush in a natural manner. At the entrance of the corral a mam moth gate was swung high In the trees, ready to drop the moment the signal was given. ' Then we had to find our elephant We started a number of herds, and finally located JupitT, with twenty, others of the finest and largest ele-, piiants I ever set eyes on. j "Now the real fun began. It took : two days of th most skilful work to get the herd anywhere near our cor ral. Our four decoy elephants did tteir work splendidly, though. It was most interesting to watch them coax the wild ones into the trap. They would rub up against them and trumpet and caper about, all the while leading the unsuspecting ele phants nearer to the lane that led them to the corral. ".sear the entrance 100 natives were stationed in the trees and when the elephants entered they began a tremendous shouting and throwing of elephant spears. The herd dashed rightstraightahead and were quickly in the corral. The big gate that closed the only aperture then was let down. "Here began the artistic wortc. The tame eiepharts were mounted bv professional elephant tamers, wno, arter the wild herd had quieted down somewhat, started to single out the leader, an exceedingly difficult task, for on the approach of the mounted elephants the big fellow would bellow with rage, and endeavor to run the traitors down. Finally all of the tamed elephants got Jupiter in a corner. 'I he four native tamers each lassoed a leg of the big beast, and their mounts started in different di rections. 'Jupiter found himself in a sur prisingly unpleasant predicament. He could neither go ahead nor re treat, and the four elephants pulled a little harder when he made an ex tra plunge. His trumiieting served to frighten the rest of the herd, and they made wild efforts to break through the corral. Unfortunately they found a weak spot, but before the entire herd could get through the natives killed several and captured some baby elephants. Then the en tire force of natives aided in getting the shackles on the Pig fellow. This was accomplished in a few hours, though generally it takes several days, but the tame, elephants aided very maetriallv. "The heavy chains once on Jupi ter, we felt as though we had indeed secured the largest elepnant in the world. While he was not fifteen feet high, we could readily see that he would measure at least twelve and a half. "We bad to starve, him three days ; before we could do anything witn ; him at all. Then we placed one ol j the trained elephants on either side, ; released him from the trees to which we had tied him and moved him about the corral. He made terrific plunges. "We got Jup ter to Hombay, but there our troubles began afresh. He became more ferocious. We kept on starving him, and then we fed him for a time, but only made matters worse. "I cabled Mr. Harnum that he could announc that I had captured Jupiter, an elephant larger than was Jumbo. Hut while waiting for a steamer that would take Jupiter to America 1 watched with uneasiness his increasing ferocity and extra shackles were put on him. "One day 1 entered the paddock next to his and unthinkingly got within range of his trunk I was seized and hurled aloft My body struck the board ceiling, knocking me senseless. When they took me from the floor I bad a broken arm and leg, three broken ribs, and was ornised from head to foot It wai teveral weeks before I could leave my bed, and Jupiter becoming so fe rocious that he could not be handled, I determined on his execution after cabling Mr. Harnum. He was an elephant it wa simp y impossible to tame, and was shot. His body weighed l,.,00d pounds. "See, here is a piece of his tusk on my watch chain. Jupiter cost about $ ,00o, and I never expect to see his like again. New York World. Good and Bad ''Advice" to a Boy. In one of the largest railroad o 1 ces in tiiis country is a comparatively young man. who is at the head of a large department When he en tered the service of the company, Ave years ago, he was green and awk ward. He wa given the poorest paid work in the department. The very first day of bis employment by the ccmpany a man who had been at work in the same room for six years approached him and gave him a little advice: "Young fellow, 1 want to put a few words in your ear that will help you. The company is a soulless cor poration that legards its employes as so many machines. It makes no dif ference how hard you work, or how well. So you want to do Just as lit tle as possible and retain your joh. That's my advice This is a slave pen, and the man who works over time or does any specially fine work wastes his stre gth." Don't you do it." The young man thought over the advice," and after a quiet lilt e struggle w th himself he decided to do the best and the most he knew how. whether he received any more pay from the company or not. At the end of a year the company raised bis wages and advanced him to a more responsi. le position. In three years he was getting a third more salary than when he begun, and in five years he was head clerk in the department; and the man who had condescen ,ed to give the greenhorn "advice" was working under him at the same llgure that represented his salary eleven yea s before. This is not a story of a goody-goody little boy who died early, but of a live young man who exists iD flesh and bllod to day, and is ready to give "advice" to other young men just be ginning to work their way into busi ness. And here it is: "Whatsoever thy hand fln .eih to do, do it with thy might." Youth's Companion An Ancient Teacher. Charles Thomp on, secretary to the first American Congress, on e boarded in the family of a school teacher named Dove, who. withhiswife, was much given to scandal. Wishing to leave them on account of their of fensive propensity, butdreading their tongues, he adopted an ingenious ex pedient to prevent them from slander ing him. One evening he asked them if his conduct as a boarder had been satis' factory, and on their answering, "Yes," he said: "Would you be good enough to give me a certificate to that effect?" "Oh, certainly." A certificate was given, and the next day he left their house. This man Dove was a humorist, and in his school, instead of whip ping an offending pupil, he made him ridiculous in the eyes of his school mates. The birch was stuck into the back part of the collar of the culprit, who, with this badge of disgrace, was made to stand upon the plat form. If boys were late in arriving at school, a committee of five or six scholars was sent into th9 streets, with a bell and lighted lantern, to hunt up the delinquents and escort them to the schoolhouse. v One day the scholars enjoyed the sport mentioned in "Hamlet, "... "to have the engineer hoist with his o'wn petard." Dove had always professed, a willingness to have his own punish ment meted out to himself in case he transgressed the rules. One morning the teacher was late, and a committee of boys, with bell and lantern, meeting him on his way to school, escorted him through the streets, to the amusement of the spectators. He had the good sense to submit quietly. Youth's Com panion. Hiding Down a Woir. It has been often noticed in India how fast a wolf travels bv means of a lounging loping trot that is by no means suggestive of speed. While one gallops after it as bard as a Rood horse can go, the wolf pursued, never apparently hurrying, lollops along at a pace that equals that of the follow ing steed. 1 have beard it said that no horseman ever rode a wolf down; i but to this statement I must demur, : Inasmuch as I have done this thing. ; Perhaps my wolf was sick, j He that as It may, I did, when out I pig-sticking in the Ganges country over against Colgong, follow a wolf. ' and that wolf turned sharply when I closed with it, and the horse 1 rode (a rare good one) kicked it over with his fore feet, and made the matter of spearing my wolf simplicity itself. One of my companions of thit day found explanat on of this perform ance In the fact that I had ridden another man's horse with my own ; spurn Black wood's Magazine. I mack Knot. Hlack knot is a rough, spongy en largement of the twigs and limbs, and Is a fungous disease The only reliable treatment yet known is cut ting off tbe knots and burning them. This should be done as soon as tbe leaves fall at latest It is essential to always burn the knots, else the spores or seeds will develop and ' spread even though the knot may j be detached and lying on tbe around not only through one orchard, but 1 from one orchard to another. 5 'A tJ1 "V rT i