TOPICS OF THE TIMES. CHOICE SELECTION OF INTER ESTtNQ ITEMS. m Criliclm Burd I' pa a (be Mmpicaisca of the Va-icai aiul Miai No tea. Lire i. eaentx. luo short t'r long engage- Kvery summer resort Ideas of style. baa Its own Some men haven't energy enough to iso work long enough to rubt.' VTTma ceded Formosa, but Japan la Trs-rh-nciugdimeulty la reaping the fcrvt. The B-Kjtou autboritii-s have decided that hereafter not a starrer shall fall uituiut their k no wit-dire. "What is there to live for?" asks the Toledo liladf. Well, let's tret even with the coffin trust for a while. St. Louis k'-epw right alone at about me-tbird of the jsipulation of Chicago, hat Is crawling up to New York slowly wm surety. There Is plenty of silver in the Den ver mint, but f'siMMj worth of gold is .'i-.isslug, and In its stead are traces of a little steal. A Philadelphia policeman who shot a 10-year-old boy offers as an excuse Ibe. plea of self-defense. 1'erhap the txy Attacked the officer with cigarettes. A New York man who eats five JCKsmds of steak, twenty eggs and Jriiiks twelve cups of coffee at a meal abt to take something" for his at iietlte.. An amateur pod who sent in a bit of Jogjjerel the oilier day referred to the editor's "wickerwoik reccpticulc." It is perhaps needless to say that he struck il the first time trying. In spite of the' pertinent query of i Miss Wlllard. "Why can't men be beau tiful?" Chauucey XI. Depew is report ed to be entertaining the idea that ho baa itrii(:i"ii! attractions to overcome - the "now woman." Tbe b.int cim-v ,,t the French n,1 Russian squadrons into the harbor at ! Kiel may or may not have significance. but the sight was not pleasant to the eye of the young 'war lord who re Ssards the great Oerniau empire as his .pergonal property. A man in Haokeusaek, N. J., recently bought a neighbor's wife for $50, paya ble in monthly installments of $5. We don't know whether he struck a good rg&ia or not, as we have lost track of the regular Jersey list prices for such Kwxbi. but it strikes us that $1.50 a week - ' pretty high. ' The sugar trust has Joined the other trusts in marking up the necessaries of life. Its excuse Is that the consumption uf sugar is about to be Increased by a Try large fruit crop. "All the traffic will bear," is the business motto of all thr- trusts, and they apply it in antici pation of future demands. 'The adoption of a system of phonetic 1 felling l a reform that will come ' Jwly, if at all. Xlany years would be . nnqiauvd U teach people that the new j Mtrtlaod was not simply bad spelling; - oiitil they could be got out of the ! jia mjii that it had Its inspiration In; r9ity instead of choice, they would rvJicub- the writer and the practice, j A Minnesota hotel advertises, "Flue p-.velair Imlhtubs free to commercial taeat, This hotel deserves to live hi bitJieny as the first establishment of Its lifcal ou earth which was ever known ft anything free to commercial tnTe?ra. It reminds the Commercial Trwr of what 5en. Sherman said Sjtt. Irfiuis hotels during the war: ""Ha.tfts. four dollars arid .dgi tig extra." per day; board A. ptir of St, 1ouis lovers tirii'd of HTe, though apparently not of each jft'bi, committed suicide by taking Siison. cutting both their throats, and vhooftliig each jotber through the heart A little more ingenuity might have managed it so that the bodies would tii.vi have rolled Into the water. They vxpended a great amount of surplus uergy,- however, as it was; quite jarnigh to have served a quartet more f foolish people. t Jwm Victoria is reported to have a arivate fortune of $175,000,000. Sta Si;Ijb with a taste for easy aritbme-y- ad tough propositions have fig nv4 it. out that If a mm could live and wor atkd aare $500 a year right along Jfee tymOd accumulate a fortune of toe ame 1m In 8SO.000 years. No candl btea Car a job of that length hare ap peared, And there ia no disputing the )Rbat that the queen business ia a pretty sea baatoieaia after all. -If the coming woman Is really taking X Aia feigner education In good cook ajry, aa la reported of her, then all will tM forgiven. Even political economy -mud aoctotogle problems will bear ptaas--at family discussion over a table con tauttag a well-eooked dinner. Perhaps therein lie tb bint of feminine final pWOiauy, for what can man refuse 9m Mag who makes an art of pleasing to fSfef awl delighting his digestion? Xart&r few? BMMt yUM aa a rapmM tr,"i to tbe atafoc power of thla ast abtl t tit wort to aotirca of dto- I wU" to tiuu djeir & uh I u-lnf niuuhI tlmf inn r " 11 !lr 1i . Bike" Is not beautiful, hut It la abort, expressive, mad unique. It certainly strike the ear a pleasantly as "dude, that wu ac cepted after protest; aa "mugwump" or ma "bulldoie." -Wheel" would do, bat the bicycle, aa Its naaie declares, baa two wheels, while "cycW hma an other use and meaning. Tbia U a busy world, and the rider who baa learned to ay "bike" will not uclearn it, even to oblige I be distinguished purists of the Eait. It ia telegraphed from Washington that the fusty halls of Congress are undergoing extensive alterations and Improvements. Thousands of electric lamps are to be put In, that each night session may glitter like a ballroom and all the statesmen be kept awake instead of sleeping comfortably, as the? would prefer. New furniture Is to be pro vided; the ventilation Is to Ik? improv ed, and altogether the staid congres sional rooms are to be rehabilitated Into cleanliness and an air of luxuri ous presciitability. Good. Now all that Is necessary is that the new Congress should renovate and improve the con ! Brohai tatemanship to match the f uruu-hiug. Xliss Martha Wilson, of Mount Ver non, N. V.. died recently, and her heirs have now discovered that between her STth and ith years she siient $.UO,umj of winch she a left lu control by her Muter, l'p to her bilh year she was very penurious bccHUe she had little money. When her ship came In, how ever, she squandered money right and li ft. As a landlady hv was Ideal, It being her habit every now and then to send the tenants receipted bills for their rent, flowers on Faster Sunday, lavish gifts on Christmas, and at other times checks 'for handsome amounts, oecasiwmlly she would give a house to a friend. In this way the good old lady managed to squander the $.Vm,iKK In three years. The Wilsou heirs are now trying to get hold of the scattered estate, but they will not have half as much fun as the old lady had lu sjiend- inK lt Probably too much attention Is being paid to the vexed bloomer controversy, but this does not mean that the con troversy Is not likely to continue. It will go on until either the costume gauges or me popular point or view cuaf. "t from growing famll- larity, the bifurcated thing no longer seems strange. Whatever the outcome, the bloomer discussion Is here to stay. Note the recent flurry In Canada, when a member of a Ixmrd of education tried to prevent school teachers from wearing the new costume. Note a similar ef fort to abolish the bloomer by calling It an article of "male attire." Note also i that these efforts have failed lamcuta j bly. While the wordy rumpus con ! tinues the new bicycle costume, advanc ing firmly and boldly on Its two legs, is working Its way into public tolera tion. The accusation that the new gar ment Is "male attire" may be parried now by calling attention to the fact that as It Is already worn by women as much as men, It Is no more man's attire than It is woman's. To rap the climax, there comes an edict of the west park board of Chicago prohibiting racing wheelmen from wearing their meager racing suits. This last looks like an Insidious flank attack of the advocates of bloomers. Can It be that the new woman, having appropriated male attire for herself, means to drive the new man luto petticoats and stays: . Though It lie a sad fact that Mark Twain is bankrupt there still remains the duiy of drawing the obvious moral of his downfall., lie was a great and popular humorist and his nimble wit rtill Insures him a salary that millions of men would covet In tiie heyday of his success he was literally coining money. Everything that he wrote for the mag azines brought a high price and his books ran through edition after edition, netting half a dozen average fortunes without the author Incurring a risk or responsibility.- Of course the publish ers were also reaping a golden harvest and Twain thought to divert thla into his own exchequer by establishing a publishing house of his own. With; two r three partners he launched Into the enterprise and the event shows that he had less financial ability than that character of bis own creation, I'ndd'n heud Wilson, who was phlloao)iher enough to say, 'Tut art your eggs In one basket and watch that basket.!' Mark Twain's uoiise first jiublfshe'dthetinint memoirs. They bad a sale so enormous that Mrs. Grant alone realized a, quar ter of a million as her share. Of course the profit of the publishers must have ; netted them a fortune, yet that, In addi tion to $70,000 advanced by Mark Twain's wife, was loot In future, ven tures. He can yet make as easy living, but the days of his great opportunities are probably past He was a success In the literary field and should have been content to remain there pursuant to the old adage that admonishes the shoemaker to stick to his last Twain la no business man. He was without experience and had no opportunity to develop any latent executive ability be might hare possessed. He waa making money fast enough to sadsfy even an unreasonable man, and yet with a greed scarcely consistent with humor, he wanted it all. lie abandoned his "forte," and declined to act upon bis own good advice leave well enough lone - Hot laiereatod. . Hurting from bar sleep, she seised her husband convulsively by the nose and one ere -lid. - - "John," ah cried, "there's a burglar fotour throat row trotworar ? : , "What do you wake me forf Irrifa btjr toMBfed tht hesd of. the hough. ilpi Reversing aa Old Haw A wide tire ordinance failed to pass the City Council of Minneapolis. One of the arguments Used aeaiust it was that it would be too expensive for busl uess nouses using truck agoiia to equip them all with tires to come wlibin the limits of the ordinance. This Is evi dently on. the theory that a isund of cure Is worth more than an ounce of prevention. In other words, these bus! uess men would rather pay a ixlund of Increased taxes for repairing paved streets than an ounce of exts-nse to have paved streets that do not need re pairing. Another, point claimed was that It would also lie a hardship on the farm ers in the vicinity. This shows how lyucu .Minneapolis aldermen know about the cost of wide tires on farm wagons. Or If they are posted, they must have strange Ideas of what con stlintes a hardship. Five dollars, at the outside, will cover the additional cyMt of a farm wagon with three-Inch tires, and If wide tires were adopted by all the farmers In the vicinity of Xliu lieapolis eai-h farmer would save ten times that amount in the first year. Are the aldermen of Minneapolis still voting for Andy Jackson? Turin Im plement News. Women anil Good Houl- Ten years ago no one dreamed that the time would ever come w hen women would le directly Interested concerning the condition of the public thorough fares. Hut the bicycle which Is resimn sibleforsticb a general stirring up of old conclusions has really set them to think ing ou this very bijdc. And when a woman thinks she's very likely to act. Just one weak little woman's momen tary impulse will often result in more real punose being ac-ouipllshed thau will 3 titree days" convention of wise old professors whose excessive pru dence is a positive prohibition to pro gress. It is said that twenty pretty bicycle girls of Kast Lynn, disgusted by the disgraceful condition of the public ; roads in the parts, determined re cently to Institute a radical reform. I The turned out In full force with picks, shovels and rollers, and repaired the worst of the road. When the blootn- ered beauties finished their week's work they pointed with pride to several miles of road which they had made fit for wheeling. In Cincinnati recently one hundred women armed with brooms, hoes, wheelbarrows and shovels legnn early one morning to clean the streets. From early In the morning until sunset the women tolled and one of the principal streets of the city was cleaned as bright as a new dish pan. Whenever a street denning omcial came along that way he was loudly hissed. It was an object lesson which it would seem can hardly fail to have Its effect If the women of this broad land seri ously take up the matter of good roads and clean streets something definite and Immediate will be the result, lie- cause woman Is a determined creature and "If she will do't, she will; and there's an end on't" BLEEDING THE GRANGER. Description of the Oeration of , yuacks Traveling in the West. The most contemptible Individual known to modern society U the travel ing quack doctor. He abounds-everywhere. His victims are confined to no class. The rich and the poor, the learn ed and the ignorant are alike suscepti ble to his promises and persuasions. He works in different was. Hotnetlmes be charters a column In the city papers, in which lie tells of bis wonderful ex ploits in medicine. lie Inserts a picture of himself, which Is sufficient evidence In Itself that he Is a man of no ability and less character. He describes him self as the renowned aud eminent Dr. Hangs from the Imperial symKslum of medicine at London, New York aud Chi cago. He comes by request of his In numerable patlenu throughout the Northwest. Consultation free. The other specimen of this perennial bar nacle comes without blare of tnnniets. He steals Into a community with bis ad vertising material. He inquires who Is sick and makes a personal canvass. Sometimes be employs some member of (he community more contemptible than himself to go with him and Introduce bim and recommend him. tie finds some Individual suffering from one of the many Ills tbat beset us all and tells of the great numlier of cases of this kind that hare been cured by him, and that notwithstanding the case has baf fled the skill of the local physicians it Is a very simple case for him, and if he doesn't cure be will ask no pay. People- who are afflicted with disease are ready to respond to any proposition that will relieve the weary, oppressed body. Fifty or $100 they consider a slight remuneration to man with skill suffldent to effect cur and they read ily sign Bot for that amount or more. The premise of "ao cure no pay" to sot tawa-rporatod In the not and the east sent doctor, aa soon am he securea (he Bora, eooatders hla work ended. r A ooopto of cams of thto kind hare rorentlr eosw to the soCkw of the wrlt w. A certain emlBMt phyttciaji by the name of A. H. Warren, hailing front Des Moines or 8benaudoab or some place down that way, made a tour of this county about a year ago. The cur lng of the mast obstinate Ills was a matter of pastime to blin. He stopped t the home of August Kolb in Hadger township and made an agreement with him to curs his wife, who was suffering from some chronic trouble. It Is un necessary to say hs promised a cure He took Mr. Kolb's note for $Hs)nd left with Mr. Kolb m printed slip on which was printed the words "the cure not guaranteed." Mr. Kolb paid no at tention to the slip and read it for the first time when the note became due. He supposed It was the contract of "no cure, no pay," wheo It was Just the, opposite. This professional pirate sold the note of course to the Herman Sav ings Bank of les Moines. Mrs. Kolb was not benefited a particle. The note became due on April 1 and It was paid. Frank Black, of Cooper towui-hlp. gave his note fur d) to the name party. It was sold to the same bank and was paid, ami Xlr. Mack received no benefit from the transaction. Mr. Mack says that there was a whole string of names of the refiKmsibie farmers of Webster County on the doctor's patient list, and as people who permit themselves to be swindled In this way may never like to tell atmut It, it will never lie known, probably, how much the eminent lr. Warren stole from the afflicted people of this and surrounding counties. Foil Dodge I'ost. Working a New Dodge. 'Fxciife me, ii ailnnip, but rou are mistaken. It was only a quarter that you ,:iive me." "I I J I jou It was not. it was n "iO- cent pleee, and I Insist ou having tie- proper change." "Well, madam, I will sepd up to the cashier's desk and verify my state ment. ' Very well. I will wall." A Ieticllcd note traveled over the trolley, and presently returned with the indorsement: "The coin was 25 cents." "I Is-lleve that you took my 50 cents and put a quarter In place of It," said the well-dressed customer, who had Ixiught some trifle at the pins and needle counter. The young woman behind the cottnt r flushed, and replied Indignantly: "That Is not true, and you know It not! You gave me a quarter of a dollar." You are linjicrtlnrnt as well as d's- honest." responded the customer. "I shall address a complaint to the man a cement ou the subject." The young woman behind the count er turned wearily to another person who was awaiting attention. Said fil ial tcr: "I hope that she will not make trou ble for yon." I guess not," was the reply. "Sh was only bluffing." "lint she thought that she did not get ' her right change." "Oti, no! I don't believe that she thought anything of the kind." "You do not mean, surely, thnt she was intentionally making a dishonest claim r "Yes. I do." "Whyr "It Is a little dodge that is tried quite frequently. . We caught a customer nt It the other day just set a little trap for her and sprung It" "Did you have her arrested?" "Oh, no! It does not pay the man agement of a dry goods shop to have people arrested, even if they should go so far as to steal things. We simply told her that her patronage was no longer desired." Gospel on Wheels. Andrew rqience is perhaps the only bicycle missionary In the worid. Ills wheel Is rigged with various parapher nalia, and weighs seventy pounds. He litis rigged It with a sail, and gets con. sidernble aid from the wind when It happens to be blowing just right Tint Ten Commandments are printed on the sail for the benefit of sinners, and the nmsts and yardarnis are uwd for th difplny of religious charts when tic- bicycle missionary Is haranguing crowd These charts, according to tiiu.niii lilwitt U'tii.n ffme Mliitll ..ml nml " w nai snail oe me nojns poi icuuing me. annihilation of the unrighteous and the redemption and reward of the holy. He Is a Canadian, Oil years of age, but since 1SS4 he bus made California his home. He has already covered atmut 5r0 miles on his wheel, but is dlsap- t pointed In the work of his sail, which frightens all the horses he meets, and, owing to the changeful course of the wind, often retards rather than aids his progress. New York Tribune, Why the People laughed. An amusing scene was witnessed by an Interested crowd of spectators at the approach to the Madison street bridge. An express wagon. No. 5318, was ap proaching the Incline, going west It waa heavily loaded with sheet iron, which projected out beyond the tall of the wagon. Aa the grade Is rather steep the equilibrium was lost and front wheels aud colored driver shot upward. The rear iirt of the load touched tu, ground, and the shifting thllis rllowed the h rse to remain Umui terra flrma, but the colored driver aud front wheels were unhappily floating between bear en and earth. He was the picture of ludicrous bewilderment, and his futllu efforts to balance the rig only added to the amusement of the onlookers. At length two car conductors and some other philanthropists rescued htm from bis lofty perch, and readjusted the load. With a "Thank you, boss; nearest heaben I eber expect to git," be drove on. Chicago Chronicle. A man wuo la particularly good at one thing, Is apt to be weh (a many other. Work la the enemy of dtoeonteak . MARKEO MONEY. Carl on Mania for m ritiaa ttenteo tloaa Krn 1 1 inia t on Bank otr. A mania -for advertising and putting strange communications on the back of the paper money of the Government has broken out. As a general thing torn bids are used, as that gives Uis man with the manlm mn excuse for his work for he uses the slip with which the pieces are put together for his purpose. Uu a bill that came Into the hands o one man ou Dearborn street was a slip on which was printed "Shake the" hot tie." When he turned it into the bank the receiving man, whose quick eye caught It, asked: "Did yon brine the bottle with you'" On a ?. bill handed over a bar on Monroe street was a slip on which w as this:.- Touch not, taste not, handle not." A Dearltorn street bank took In a bill not long ago on the back of which was pasted a slip that had print ed ou It the tea commandments. ' .A cashier lu a mercantile house on Itandolph street has a bill of $U denom luutiou ou w hich is a slip, and ou the slip Is written In a woman's chirogra phy an offer of marriage. The writer puts it thus: "I give lip my last uiouey on tlds. I send It out Into the world, hoping it may return to mo with a good man who will love me and take care of me." Hut no address accon))anles the offer. . A bill Is in a frame In an express of fice. There Is a hole in the bill, and a note explains that the hole was made by a bullet fired by a train robber. The bill was In the side pocket of the ex press messenger. A bill handed In at a cigar store on Madison street had this on the back: "Don't come back to ine until you can bring your sliver brother w 1th you." A physician iu the Venetian building has a private mark on a $5 bill which he sent afloat several years ago. It comes ba"k to him nboiit twice a year. wholesale merchant over on Adams street was In China and Japan a few years ago. lie gave a Japanese fune , tlonnry a ?5 bill as a souvenir, placing on thesamea privatemark. About three weeks ago It came into his possession again. He Is confident that he Is not mistaken In the mark, and does not fi-el complimented over the idea that his Japanese acquaintance did not think enough of him 1o keep the bill A business man of this cily relates this: He went from Chicago to Flits burg on a sleeper. He paid the con ductor for his berth, giving him a mark ed $5 bill. He went from l'ittsburg to Cleveland the second day, and ou the third day he bought a sleeping car ticket for his return trip. The conduc tor handed him the same bill be had given to the other conductor. There is ft bill floating about the I country somewhere on the back of 'which Is a prescription written by a reputable physician several years ngo. It is a "sure cure" for the grip and was put there by the doctor out of a fancy that it might save aomelxidy's life. Another one is in circulation, presum ably, on which is written: "If this should fall into the hands of Itetilicn Middleman he will please communicate his address to his brother James, Gen eral Delivery, Iloston, Mass., on or be fore January, lHlNi. After that In Frig land. He knows where." Chicago Tribune. Was Willing to Work. The tramp was very humble when he asked for something to eat. "I'lease. mum," he said, "I'm starv In. Won't you give a poor feller as has lost all his fom'ly n bite to eat?" But there was something cold and suspicions In her manner. Khe was In clined to doubt his honesty from the start "Want pie, I B'pose," she said sharply: f "No, mum,' he answered . meekly. "I'm afeared ple'd be too rich fer me now." "Doughnuts, mebbe," she suggested. "No, mum," he replied. "Doughnuts is an rtgut, out i ami expectiu' 'em. I A poor lone man that's down on his tile!? S'flit'r nff.r,l 1. t... -1 u. ...... COIU VlClU.'llS TI1HI left firer il Oil n humrrv m.'in r.Ientv m,ui mn..Vh Ain't , ... ... you got a jittie stale uroau tnat tne dog (Jn'j want?" "Poor man." she said, considerably mollified. "I believe you really are hungry." "Yes, mum starv in, regularly starv iu'." I Then lin It-toil ttm tnuf t.ai utn. ;ct,rt)v "Hee here." she said. "A man that's real hungry will work to get something to eat" "I'll work," he replied promptly. "I'm a w ork In' man. I've worked fer the city, tilve me stithin' to eat an' I'll work fer you." , "I'll try you," she exclaimed; and then, after be had eaten enough for two men she said: - "I a'pose you can use a hammer and saw?" "No, mum," he returned apologetical ly. "Well, you can handle a shovel, any way." . . "No, mum." - j ' 1 . Her first suspicions returned and she eyed blm sharply. "You said you'd work for your din ner," she exclaimed. "Yea, mum," he replied. "Rut I ain't used to work In' except on the mu nicipal aewer pipe extension plau." "What's that?" aha asked. "W'y, mum, all a feller has to do la Jest to atep up an' draw bis pay. I've drawn mine bow, aa' I cheerfully certi fy that the cookln' was good. Good day, mum."-Tlmea-Herald. 1 Pat Mcienoe to New Use. . Rio do Janeiro, the capital of lraill, baa a notoriously bad climate., It la a fastneao of yellow f over aad subtle tropical allmenta, and tha death rata la so alarmingly blgb as to seriously affect the commercial prosperity of the city. Roma time ago the Itraziilan OoTern meut tisik la hand the question of re moving their capital mud appointed a scientific commission to fix a site, say the I'ittsbnrg Dispatch. The commission have selected a p'as teau which should be a real laud o?( promise to the transmigrants from th coast. The spot is between the paral lels of 15 degrees 40 minutes and 10 degrees 8 seconds south, and the meri dians of VJ degreed 30 minutes and 61 degrees west. It Is over 4,MiO feet abova the level of the sea and Its temperature resembles that of middle France. There Is plenty of water for agriculture and no yellow fever. The Journey by rail way from the coast Is a matter of some eighteen hours. Thla is believed to lie the first occasion on record In which science has lsen called In to choose tha site of a capital. He Had a Hour ug-Koom. "I'm only a smooth-water sailor," the late millionaire horseman. John A. Mor ris, used to say. He had his yacht, the ,Cora. named for his wife, built fur the shallow waters around New Orleans, and found it almost totally unfit for the rougher element here. Its cabins were like the rooms in a house, and all Its furnishings anil equipments were sumi tuous. It was slow and rolling, says a writer In the New York Times, but was good enough to go to the ra'-es In. When In command of the deck Mr. Morris made It a rule to concede the right of way to every craft he met. "These peo ple are working," he would say, "while I am only out for fun. It Is my business to give way to them." Hut illi bis. customary shrewdness, be had another reason, w h'icb he never mentioned: "Hy getting out of the way of these people I make them my friends. If anything were to happen -If the Cora were to run down a vessel by any clnuice, these people would not make much of a fuss alsmt It. They all know tne and my boat and never give w ay, because they know I shall do It." lie snored like a bull. On the. deck of the yacht he built a snoring room, where he could bellow und snort without disturbing his guests. The boat, was stocked with the finest wines ami liquors, cordials, etc., but they were for his friends. He never touched them, lie was the finest carv er I ever knew. He used the most wonderful knife, and never was known to miss a Joint When the Cora was at New Orleans Mr. Morris turned it over to his young friends. Every day some young lady would receive a note to the effect that the yacht was hers the next day, and ns many of her friends as she cared to Invite. Statist ic of Hurls in Italy, Duel statistics, gruesome though they are, are Interesting reading. Au Italian "man of figures" has taken the trouble to ascertain to what extent his coun try has contributed, during the last ten , . years, toward the Increase In the ftnny-5 of duelists. The following figures are the result of his researches: "From 18K4 to 18!4 no less thau IH7 duels were fought In Ifaly over newspaper contro versies, 7!i0 by rival lovers, 377 over political questions, 2i for insults, lh.1 for private reasons, and K) over gam bling quarrels. In "'. cases the cause of the duel was unknown. Journalists and officers In Italy are first among duelists. Of the 5.'!H duels fought In IKH-l, l.'sl were fought by journalists and 1(15 by officers In the army. Of dueling lawyers titere were 01; tmlints !.'!; professor 22; Deputies 14; engi neers and architects l.'l; servants ti; and bankers 2. How hoimier Kvaried a Question. When the Prince De Joluville was at Hat hurst many years ago he was re ceived by the Koyal African Corps, black trooiis officered by white men. He attended a dinner party, wherein mulnttocs appeared In full evening dress, low Isidlces, lace handkerchiefs, and fans'. Afterward, dining at Wash ington with Charles Kumner, the great nlKilltlonist, the Prince amused him self by telling about bis Jlathurst din ner, and asked Kumner whether he had- ver given his arm to n tiegress. The Prince awaited his auswer with some curiosity, to see whether he would dare answer In the affirmative before the American ladles, who were quite sen sitive ou the color question, but he got out of It very adroitly. "My dear Prince," said he, " Ju every religion each man has his own share of work. I preach and you practice Don't let us mix the two things up together." Nit l'p Htralglit on Your Iticycle. There Is absolutely no , reason for stooping over the bundles In either of the two ways so commonly seenand there is no excuse for so doing In ordi nary road riding. It may be necessary for the "scorcher' to assume 4he one or the other of these attitudes to sprawl with the body straight but al most horizontal, and the head close to the handle bar, or to liend the upper part of the back as If trying to break it In the middle, and throw the should era forward as if desiring to make them meet across the breast Even so one who Is not "scorching" does not need to make himself a hideous object to ' look at and also to reduce the benefits of wheeling to a minimum, so far aa Ita effects on the chest capacity Is con cerned. Hcrlbner, Many Car Fenders Patented. The patent office la at present hunilng car-fender patents at the rate of seven a week. One of Uie latest la In the form of a horizontal circular brush made to revolve rapidly when the car Is In mo tion by means of gearing from the axle, The brush la a trifle greater Id diame ter than the width of the track, and la supposed to brush fne victim out of the way of the wbeela. Aa eon aa a woman m. i. m-m m m Of aow Hothea, aba dtooorara thai aha la wBsajome,