The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, August 12, 1897, Image 2
1 J f" 1 f r t V foardaon 3ournaI. n. camuw. uiimi BASKI80N, NEB. Barney Barnato practically owned aa earth; he s iould have stuck to it Barney Barnato'a career was a series f leaps. First as an acrobat, then in to fame, and finally into the sea. The New York World editorially re fers to "rascals" In the United States senate. This is very undignified. It is Uso very true. Emma Goldman, the Gotham anar rhist, says that "men are chains which hold women back from progress." Would Emma refuse a nice, gold-filled Ihain as a wedding present? When a New York wife mistook a an-glar for her husband the other night le gave himself away by answering in be dark, "Yes, dearie!" Such a hung er deserves hard luck for his stupidity. The Memphis Commercial-Appeal cites the case of a white man named ftlcafd of Newport, Tenn., who has pecently turned black. It will proba My be a month or so before he gets the tar off. A "South Sea Paradise" founded in (he Fiji Islands by tired Californiane las coIVpsed because the settlers found work to be necessary even there. Hie primal curse of Eden seems to be juite far-reaching still. The Almond (N. Y.) True Issue re narks editorially: "The editor was the happy recipient of a new straw hat last week. Thanks." And yet they lay journalism is a profession which kas no substantial rewards. The editor of the San Joaquin Val iey Reflector, a new Fresno paper, promises to remain "a plain, everyday citizen, without getting a swelled head," if success should crown his ef forts. Let him be put to the test. There are no fish in Crater Lake, Ore gon - the deepest fresh-water lake in the world, and the government has decided to stock it with trout. The natives used to say that the lake Is krttoinless, but soundings have shown Its greatest depth to be 2,000 feet. The Philadelphia Inquirer, comment ing on the statement of a St. Louis pa per which "welcomes the sweet girl fraduates with open arms," remarks: "We would do the same thing if we thought our wives would not find it ut" How many wives have "we" bow? A Kentucky reporter asked a rull man conductor to awaken the Presi lent at 2 o'clock in the morning for au Interview. There is a young man who has a fir realization of the Importance vt his calling. What a magnificent ad vertisement for somebody's nerve ton ic that fellow could write! All the street cars in Albany, N. Y., have recently been provided with a rtyte of fender known as "the provi ience," and the New York Times in de JcribiHg the machine says that a man ivbo is scooped up in one of them "is ipt to have an exciting moment or two, but he will escape any serious Injury." When the personal effects of the late Sir Augustus Harris were sold in Lon lon the other day 176 manuscript plays !rom ail sources, which bad been sub nltted to the manager with a view to woduetion, were knocked down to the ligibest bidder for $5. Playwritlng tbikity in England seems to be reeog ilne about as it Is in this country. Some Pennsylvania congregations ire getting very particular If the Pbila lebphia Inquirer is correct in saying that one of them recently requested a lea eon to carry a cash register when taking up collections. It Is gratifying to note that the deacon Is reported to hare resigned rather than submit to the Innovation. Waiter Ktotredge, author of "Tenting the Old Camp Ground," Is tivinc at Seed's Ferry, N. H. He was a popular linger long before the war and wrote nany of Ms songs. 'None ever acquired Ihe l opularity equal to "Tenting on the Md Camp Ground," whk-h Mr. Kit redge wrote and composed on the night Ifter be was draft! Into the army. The Oweneboro, Ky., News an nounces editorially that It is "the offi cial war whoop of the dark and bloody rround; the only paper of the kind m or off the earth; recbercbe, racy, re ligious and revengeful; old whisky al ways taken In exchange for subs, and Ida." That editor evidently nnder- atanda the demands of bis constituency nd his enterprise ought to win. An English paper states that at least SO per cent, of "antique objects" now In existence bars been manufactured within the last dozen years. In a re- mt lawsuH In Ioadon some workmen bowed In court bow ormolu is "an tiqued" by Um use of pumice powder. Dm magistrate ordered a cabinet to be kept under lock until be coold decide Whether it wan ancient or modern. . ttmrnsmmemamBBf A St Louis Inventor hi patented a laf lea by maaaof wfciefe type-setter, e3 i sMcfcia wha keys raasmbltntf ri fr t:J vt taper each mitter, connected by wires with dls- J tant type-setting machines, properly adjusted for the purpose, the type caa be simultaneously set in as manv dif- ferent printing offices as may be con - nected In the circuit. Lord Kelvin's confident declaration that the world has been a solid body 20,000,000 to 30.000.000 years, and that it has been habitable all that time should quiet the apprehensions of those who have an idea that the world is to become so crowded that there will not be room for us all. leath has evidently attended closely to his business since the world has been peopled. '.tourists are beginning to talk of the Arctic regions as a summer resort. One who penetrated Rpitzenburgen last year says the temperature on a clear July day is about like that of an En glish spring, but more frequently the midsummer weather Is cold enough for winter clothing, including pea-jackets lined with fur. The Interior of Spltz enbergen, though but little explored, is to be brought within ten days of Lou don. Prosecutions are expected to begin soon under a new Massachusetts laW which forbids the wearing of the bodjl or feathers of any undomestlcuted bird, Every offender will be fined $10, and the prosecuting Witness will be paid a reward of $.". As about all the offend ers are likely to be women, the Massa chusetts man is only interested in th probable effect of the law upon mil linery bills. Should it reduce these bills there may be more or less mascu line clamor for a persistent and rigid enforcement of the humane enactment A few years ago Barney Barnato waj an unknown speculator in the stocks ol South African mining corporations ou meager capital and prospecting in tb diamond fields of that modern Got conda. By a rare freak of fortune h was piloted to the hiding place of tin measurable wealth, and there loaded himself with treasures so fabulous ol worth that he became almost In a day one of the richest men of the world. A nobody o luckless speculator almost ;i refugee he nevertheless stepied from" the shadow of poverty into the Lime light of wealth a millionaire iu a dayt Then he apieared on the bourse as i 1 boomer of South African stocks. Tb(J boldness and magnitude of his d-&14 startled the world, and he was balle as the "Katfir King." The sudden nes.4 of his rise brought to hhn new an) manifold responsibilities. In trying ti meet them he overtaxed his phystoil powers. Nervous prostration super- ; vened his mind gave way, ami when life held out its fairest promise of con- ' tentment and luxury he was asked W ' pay the penalty of overworking body j and mind. From this he escaped by leaping overboard at sea from the ship that was bearing him from worry Ui rest and he was drowned. The rise and fall of Barney Barnato was as marvel ous and bewildering as the rise and fall of the meteor. Six soldiers at Fort Cook, near Oma ha, have been tried by a post court and sentenced to thirty days in the guard house and a line of $10 each, fhe charge leing said to be mutiny. It appears that they were ordered to clean the house of the company com mander. They did so under protest. Afterward they requested permission to lay their alleged grievance before the commander of the post. It was j then that they were hauled before the alleged court, tried and put in the guardhouse. By some means they managed to secure an attorney, and be Is going to attempt their release on ha beas corpus proceedings. He will prob ably fail. They are on Federal ground and tijeir alleged offense and trial took place there. Their plea Is that they ties" in the middle rfi first, and makes did not enlist as servants. It is hard to 1 1 sort of curve as It descends. This is see of what their mutinous conduct i little more serious than the first, and conduct consisted. They performed j 'ias caused many fatalities. Then there their work. They cannot, therefore, j s one that breaks at the bottom and be mutineers. Their crime must becomes straight out, reaching clear that they asked the privilege of putting ' icross the street, and remaining almost the matter before the post commander. The regulations of the army and navy are something wonderful and fearful. Their inspiration is not founded upon the Institutes of Justinian or any oth er recognized lawmaker. They are part and parcel of an arbitrary code repugnant to free-born citizens of a re- repugna public. Everyoue recognizes the ne cessity of discipline In an army, but the principle Is grossly abused In every post In the union. There is no more reason why the privates of the United States army should be made to clean the private house of one of the officers titan that citizens should be taken from the street and compelled to do the same thing without pay. The offi cers of the army of this country are well paid. Those of no other army In the world get such remuneration as they do. Besides their education at West Point they receive many other perquisites. In some Instances, and probably In this case, their house rent Is free. Why did the officer In ques tion not have the manliness to hire his house cleaning done as other citi zens do. Instead of sponging upon the underpaid privates? An Old Notion. , The notion that it Is not good to eat oysters hi any month that has not an r In it is very ancient. It Is to be found m a work published In 1500, and the entence reads as follows: "It Is un reasonable and unwholesome, In all months that have not an r In their Same, to eat an oyster." - Thm Prtaoipal Tower. A donjon meana the principal tower of a castle; It waa usually raised on a natural or artificial mound, and situ ated In the luaafmot court Its lower part waa commonly used aa a prison. It waa somaKaai caUad taa donjon. tr r intra. A FABLED ROC. ' ; teo Po, Te,u 't He Heard of i the Mon'er Blp1- 1 True ptor' of Marpo Polo," as J to,d st. Nicholas by Soah ! Brooks, contains many stories atout fabulous monters. j You must know that this island lies so far south that ships cannot go fur ther south or visit other Islands in thatl direction, except this one and that other of which we have to tell you, rail ed Zanghibar. This is because the sea current runs so strong towards the south that the ships which should at- j tempt it never would get lwck again. j Indeed, the ships of Maabar which vl4s it this Island of Madeignscar, and that other of Zanghitwir, arrive thither with marvelous sliced, for great as the dis tance is, they accomplish it In twenty days, while the return voyage takes them more than three months. This is because of the strong current running south, which continues with such sin gular force and in the same direction at all s'iisons. j 'Tis said that In those other Islands to the south, which the ships are un able to visit because this strong cur rent prevents their return, is found the bird Gryphon, which appears there at certain seasons. The description given Of it Is, however, entirely different from what our stories and pictures make it. For persons who have been there and had seen It told Messer Marco Polo that It was for all the world like an eagle, but one Indeed of enormous size; so big. In fact, that Its wings covered an extent of thirty paces, and its quills were twelve paces long, and thick In proportion. And It Is so strong that it will seize an elephant In its talons and carry him high into the air, and drop him so that he is smashed to pieces; having so killed him, the bird ( gryphon swoops down upon him and eats him at leisure. The people of those Isles call the bird rue, mid It lias ; no other name. So If I wot not if this i oe uie real grypiion. or ii uivre le the real gryphon, or If there Ik; j another mauir of bird as great. But this I can tell you for certain, that i they an1 not half lion and half bird our stories do relate; but enormous ( as they be, they are fashioned just like an eagle. The Great Khan sent to those parts I to inquire hIkhH these curious matters, and the story was told by those who ' went thither. He also sent to procure the release of an envoy of his who Lad Imh-u dVpntched thither, and had l)een detain!; so lth those envays had many wonderful things to tell t ho Great Khan alxmt those strange Isl ands, and alwitit the birds I have tneu , tioned. They brought a.s I heard" to the Great Khan a feather of the said , rue, which was stated to measure nl) jty spans, while the quill part was two Wilms in circumference, a marvelous object! The Great Khan was d'llght-Kd..itli..it-n1 cave great presents to those who brought it. They also brought two lioar's tusks, which weigh ed more than fourteen pounds apiece; and you may gather how big the boar must have lseen that had tw-th like that! They related, indeed, that there were some of these Ixiars as big as a great buffalo. There are also numbers 'at .irany8 atKj wji,i assy's; and. in fact, si marvelous number of wild Ixists of strange nsicct. Kallintr Walls at Kiren Mr. Charles T. Hill contribute to St. N'icbolas an article ou "The Perils of 1 Fireman's Life," in the course of which he says: There are several kinds of falling walls, and the fireman of experience knows them well, and what to expect 'rom each. There is one kind that breaks first at the bottom and comes lown almost straight, somewhat like l curtain. This makes a big noise, but ,s not very much to be dreaded. Then !here is another that bulges or "buc- olId until it strikes; and. as an old lime fin-man once remarked: "That's :he kind you want to dodge." This kind of "falling wall" has caus d more deaths In the department than luy other danger the flrerneu have to intend with. It has killed horses as aell as men, and destroyed apparatus; ind It is so rapid in its descent, and overs so much space, that to escape It :he men have to le quick Indeed. Colored People Never Sneeze. "It was Irofessor Schrocdcr of Lotils rille," volunteered a surgeon to a report'-r. "who first ventured the jpinioti that the negro never sneezed, rhe Htatemeiit was made In reply to l question of Professor Gross, the fa nous Philadelphia surgeon, and In vhose memory a statue was recently ledirated In this city. A smile pawd iround tiie listcTM-rs, and Professor fc-hroedcr, observing that there was louie doubt about his statement, relter Ited It with some force. He then ex laind that , while thm? were no itnicturnl arrangements alsnit the breathing npiianttiHi of tlte colored race lhat had been discovered which prevented him sneezing, it was a fact that the colomd man did not sneeze, hough ne couki Ik; made to mieexe by the uhc of snulTs, pepier and other 'rrltant. Ho had, ho said, never made iny experiments In that coruwetlon. He alno H!d his ohf!rvatlm Isid Iwen ronflixvi to colored K"opU' i tin Sfsithern States. Atmospheric or rther conditions might exist elsewhere rhlch might cpu-w him to swneze, but one existed naturally in tlie Mouth, riie deba!e on the subject occupied xnrly an hour at a nie-tlng of the fnternatkmal flurgtcji) Aswoclatlon, rblcb held a convention ta the old Liaooha hall some years ago. Since Imo, I hart often spoke of It and Mkad my friends to notice, and tnough I-tart dlrortsd to attanUoa of hua- drwls to the subject, I have yet to j hear the first one say that they have ever inwrd a urgro man or woman sneeze. Hy negro I mean a black man or woirian. I believe that mulattoes j sneeze occasionally and tlie neai-r , they axe to white the more frequent ly they siieese, but even tlvey are less s-usit!ve to Influences which pnshice sneezing than the ieopie of tlie white race. It lias been observed also tluit Indians sneeze very seldom, while Chinese snwze ten tU-.es as tmich, even, as the white nu-e." NV'asii-igtou Scar. Barbem' Clippings Cseful. Futil ciuite receatly do effe-t.lve use had Im'H found, even hi this age of tlte unlersal utilization of waste, for tit? clippliivs of mvn's hair left over In liarl.vrs' shojis, though all mauuer of experiuicuts have fri!!i time to time nn uuulv with tills material. I5ut a very w 11 known llshing-tarkle maker, who sends his wares all over tlie world, l as of late lmnght qiuiutites of such hair, and the writer sought him out in order to ascertain the jineclso usi-s to whi-h it was put. aul Informa tion win readily given. I My wifkix'oi)le use large quantities of human hair in the making f arti ficial fishing tiies. for certain parts of which it is the best material out, Wniped thickly round the IkmIIcw of; many kinds of flU-, it has the quality j of not gathering water and getting sodden, as silk dm-s, while it stands more wear and tear. Hut even bcyoaid ', this, we use a considerable lunouut hi tying gut on hooks. AIdel by a sjnall patented implement, iKH,k tfcw now , commonly use unman nair iiwi'mi ot silk, and the lushing Is liot.h stronger and neater. Hut a plan has leeti de vised for using human hair almost ex clusively in silk and liair combina tion rol lines, in which horsehair a.loni was at one time employed, and these new lines are tULsurpassd for tough ness and lightness. You are mistaken In supposing that fishing-tackle makers are the only persons who buy bi,rlers' clippings. Within tin? last year or two tons of hair ha-e been packed In the lining Is-tweer the Iron plaits forming tiie annor sheathing of certain jwirts of war vessels; a jx-culiar typ- of cupola, for Instance, luivirig a thickness of tightly iickcd hair ln-twc-ii casings of metal. Tlte luiir i-s so elastic that it is said to fonn a most cITWlive back ing to metal; and uImi In conne-tioai with shiiiping, the makers of K-hip' feiulers the soft spheres of tow-rope that arc thrown over the side of a vessel to prevent her from scrubbing against tlie edge of a quay or dock are beginning to utilize human hair. Imparl at. A remarkable instance of tlie Im partial a lmiu1stni! ion of justice is saJd to have occtirmd some years ago In a -ourt of Texas wlwn a romir Mex ican, charged Willi having stoh'i a pistol, was arraigned. lb provKl l5nid all drtiit that the !stol Mas his ow-n, and that It lisid been in his jHiKses.'dou iotlg before th'J hllt-getl tiieft 'K urrHl. Tlie a.se wtcrt to the jury at twelve o'clock, t !n usual liur f ad journment, and the jury, who did not wish to 1m- kept until tli court o;M ncl again t thr o'cl--k. burrs d to give lu ticlr erdict. The for-iiian, wlm had Iteoti ie'lin,i,ug In a iMttceful attitude, suggestive ttt slumlsT. luri:ig th he:irui his crt)iianiiis. saying: turned to j "Well, lwys, wlutt do you Uiiik? Hadn't we in-ttcr give h!:n two yrs?H "AH right," rejM:idi".l a Jurymaji. "Put hlr.i throujrh, or the judge will luljotini." "Go als-ad" soUl rtnnh'r. "We doJi't want to stay here till tiirK' o'-lock. Hurry up!" "Hut Is lie guilty?" inquired a thoughtful old g-jm!ciii!i,n. ''ell." exclaiaiiieI the fiirornau, after a stare of astonishment at this view of the UMMter, "if you think he ain't guilty let's clear hhn!" A verdict of "Not guilty!" 'was hfie lly rendered, ami tlie juryanan cheer fully repaired to nxmtlde nud. Aluminum. Aluminum, the new metal which it Is ls4lcved Is destined to play an im portant i-art iu tlie arts from this timo on, is found In many subtftauces, widely diffused through nature. The common red clay, which exists every-! where K this wuntry, at a (b-vth of 3 or 4 feet, contains It In large quanti ties, aiwl It Is also prcsoit-ui Hlatc, fcldspu" and otlKtr minerals. The metal was given its name, In 112, by Sir Humphrey Davy, who susiof-ted the exlieju of tlie metal Ln certain compounds, but failed to Isolate It. It was first Isolated by Wohl-r, In 182S, ' who oblaltusl the metal lu small quantities. In IH.5 a French chemist, M. DcHlhv lUwiioustrnted tliat the metal could lie prepared lu large quan tities for commercial use. It has lieeu prepared from Greenland' cryolite, and from the bauxite which about! In the southern part of France, Since 1!X) the inotal lias ls productMl In commercial quantities by tlie employ nient of tlectrlclty in ids separation, but the irM-esses, though much elM-sper, that; formerly, are still somewhat ex p'iistve. thotigh It Is exj.ee ted tlie ex IxTlinents now being made will render aluminum o ctsap that It can lie used for any purpose to which Its nature Is adapted. An Economical Kmperor. Emjieror Francis Joseph, U cutting down t!.e expenses of his household and put'lug an end to perquisites en-' Joyed by court servants since the days of Marin Theresa. They hail an al- lowonce of wood, wine and venison, with two wax candles In summer and three In winter. These are put an end to. Their liveries will no longer bo their own, and tney will not be allowed to sell the cold victuals laft from ttaa dally intaja nod tb Suta lwnqiiasi I -J f ) v n I; -X y w t ii w. Good Boidi Par. Conditions such as recently existed in a small town in New Jersey, twelve miles from Philadelphia, form a fit ting object lesson of the profit of good roads. In colisequelK-e of the bad roads the wagon makers thereabout constructed four-horse vehicles to car ry fifty-five bushel baskets as a maxi mum loud, which was regarded as heavy hauling. Heal estate had gone a-lx'gging for years; there was no pos sible market for It. It hud Ix-en im possible to settle up estates because no purchaser could 1 found for the laud Hut a few years ago the people of the community woke up. The town issued $40,joi worth of bonds and applied the proceeds to letter roadways. As a re sult New Jersey wagon makers of the vicinity of Philadelphia are making two-horse vehicles to carry, not fifty- five bushel backets, but loads made up from ninety to 12T bushel Imskets, and still the loads are not regarded as heavy. Two horses are able to do more work than four horses, and with much more ease. On the old roads two men and four horses, with a wagon weighing 1,900 IK)UI1(ls ,ak( tW(( an(, a llaIf ton8 of produce to market and bring lwck an equal amount of fertilizer, making one trip a day. Now, on the good roads, one man with two horses, and a wagon weighing 2,.'i'Kl pounds, makes I four trips to market, bringing back an equal weight and making four trips a day. Jersey City Evening Journal. Good Hoailn. Cliarles Echo, taking tests as the basis of Its estimates that It costs The Lake Trout wine's calculations, Louisiana $.",2.ri(i.iHii a year to move its crops, and that two-thirds of this could be saved if he had good roads. Trant wine's tests show the number of pounds of pull required to move a ton on different kinds of roads to lie as follows: P!ai:k n ::!. to ."(); cubical Mock, brick. ;2 to ."i0; uiin-adani, 2 to "!"; gravel, H(f; coinuion earth. U0 to 3')i. The pull ou earth riads In dry seasons Is from six to eight times as hard as on brick, and three or four times as hard as macadam, ami in wet ! seasons much greater, and In iyouis- iana, with Its heavy rainfall, we have longer wet seasons than any other part of the country, and, as a conse quence, worse roads. The United States Agricultural Hu reflu figures that it costs tlie fanners f.t jier'Ton to bant their crop from the farm to the railroad or market. With a total production of l,75fl,(XW1 tohsrtT corn, cane, cotton, rice, etc., the haul ing costs Louisiana fanners $."i.li.rVt.(f(S) now, which cost can be reduced $.1, r.Hi,(HH if the roadways are made bet ter. If, therefore, Ixiuislana spent 4ki,0(io a yiir on its roads. It would be better off financially, their cost lielng !-ss than they would le saved In haul ing. The expenditure of such a sum of money would put our highways in splendid condition in a very few years; j,ut such au expenditure Is not dreamt of, nor would the people favor It. The lMKt course In Iyoulsiana would le that which has met with such suc cess elsewhere to build Just enough tulles of good roflds to enable the peo ple to see and appreciate their value, and how much they can save by them. If this were done, as In Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and other States, it would not be long ls-fore the people demanded better roads In ev ery part of tlie State. It Is promised to bring the matter before the Legislature at Its next ses sion, but It would lie well to Inaugurate a preliminary campaign, so tliat there will be popular backing to a "good road" law when it conies before the General Assembly. New Orleans Times-Democrat Widows for Hale. "Of all the matrimonial trafficking In the age of chivalry the ways of widows." says a writer In the "Gentle man s Magazine," "are at once the boldest and most comprehensive. As a rule, their methods seldom resort to blandishment; it is remarkable when tenderness Is an Item In their bargains. Speed was their maxim; it was one that King John honored, for he profit ed by It. "Yet one of the rarest exceptions in the way of delicacy to these commer cial negotiations has evidently Im-cu prompted by a widow who hud quite an exceptional lover. In HJ'Ni William de Lands either one of the most fa mous of the Crusaders or his son offers TA) marks and a palfrey for hav ing to wife Joan, who was the wife of Thomas de Arey, 'If he may be pleasing to the said Joan; the sheriff Is Instructed to ascertain the widow's wishes, 'and If the said Joan shall be pleased to have him for a husband, then tlte sheriff shall cause Will nun to have seizing of Joan and her land' both of which he olrtilucd in the name of gentle love and the faith of a true soldier. It is filing that the name of one of the men who led the assault of Acre snoiiKi ne preserved in such a rec- orA thw ve. He ws In truth a Tery prrect snignt. "n ' the most rampageous of the ortliem English borderers manifested U k delicacy, Youi Walter de t'mfravllle. son of Glltert, had left n widow, Emma, presumably In the wry b'uh br charma. Peter de Vaux d fallen at her feet, but he declined to ootln br ln border fashion; and tbla fact Is the eamett pledge of the cMrniry of his lova. If bt would not seal her be was bound to buy her, aiid coin with the De Vaux was always a scarcity. So he offered the king five palfreys for her If he wished It,' and with what would read as a grace'ul acknowledgment of the Isirderer's pure chivalry, John absolutely drops the commercial from his reply and sim ply orders Hobcrt Fltz Hoger, the sher. Iff, to permit It to lie done.' Victoria's Descendants. A laliorious genealogist announces, as the result of years of minute labor, that the Queen has had n'ne children, of whom she has lost two; forty-one grandchildren, of whom eight have died; and twenty-three great-grandchildren, all of whom are living. She has, therefore, sixty-three descendants living seven children, thirty-three grandchildren, and tweiity-Lbrce ot the next generation, iller eldest great grandchildthe Princess Feodoia of Saxe-Melningen Ig now nearly 17, so that in all probability her Majesty will live to see her grandchildren's grand children. Few English sovereigns be. fore Queen Victoria have seen grand children grow out of infancy, and uono ever saw a great-grandchild. Hence her Majesty had to determine the ques tion of precedency In the case of the Duchess of Fife's children, and rdie wisely decided that they should rank only as daughters of a duke. 4 I This decision was ln accordance with 1 a House law decreed earlier ln Ur reign, by which the title of prince and V, royal highness is limited to the '.-hil-dren of the sovereign, and the children of the sovereign's sons, the children of tlie sovereign's daughters taking prece dence only according to the rank of their fathers. Thus the Princess 1 1 el ena's children rank as children of Prince Christum only, while the Duke of Conuaught's are royal highnesses; and Prince Arthur of Conuaught's son and successor, if he has one, will be the Duke of Oonnaught, as an ordi nary duke, taking precedence merely by date of the creation of his duke dom. This Is now the case of the Duke of Cumberland on the roll of the House of Iinls. though he Is styled royal highness as son of a king of Hanover. Ilroke a Klg (odd Coin. One of the most puzzled men In town is a Montgomery street restaurant keeper, who recently took in a .-') gold piece which tilled all the ordinary re quirements of genuineness so far as a stijterficlal test could reveal the true facts. Hut a few days ago a banker Hepped Into his place and saw thij S-'O gold piece which the restaurant man had riMTlved only a short time Is-fore. Thc'lmiiker had a qui cr lk in hl eyes as he took the coin and rapped It sharply with his knife and the rcstait-raut-keeper had a stranger expression as he saw his supposed f 3) piece break into two pieces. "How Is this?' he demanded. Tin banker answered; "It Is the same old game. 1 had one of tlus hve tested gold pieces or tlie X3 (lenii.nllia tlon very carefully. If that had ls-en genuine my test would not have bro ken It." I'hen the restauraiit-UeeiM-r anil the bunker carefully examined It together. The outside of the gold piece was all rlKht, seemingly, when the dissevered jmrts were placed together. The mill ing sti-med to be up to the standard. The weight was correct. Hut the Inside of the piece was half tilled with ft composition which wns not the customary gold and alloy. S: 1.1 closer examination revealed that the gold had Is-eii sawed through with ex quisite care and skill Just Inside of the milling. Then the milling had been removed and from the Interior of th piece some of tlie gold had been ex-tracti-d ami the baser composition was made to take the place of the more precious metal. Then, with equal deft ness and skill, the milling had been replaced and soldered In some way and the trick was done. San Francisco Call. Stringent Food Laws. France knows how to protect tlie rights of her people. Anybody who dotiMs the ge-niilneness of an article of food that lie has purchased from a Parisian tradesman may take It to the tase u to me analysis. "J have It und uined whetffrl adulteratedA municipal LilstriUory for analysis. will cost him nothing to alyzed and the fact detenu. er It Is unadulterated or adulterated and If the latter tlie law deals with the offender without further action on the part of the purchaser. The shopkeeper Is liable to be heavily fined and impris oned, and has to display conspicuously ln his shop window or on his door for a year a large placard bearing the words, "Convicted of Adulteration." Tlie Mack Tree. From n kimk-Ics of trees, the genus which Includes the celebrated upas tree, sacks are made In Western India by the following singular process. A branch Is cut corresMndlng to the length and diameter of the sack want ed. It Is soaked a little, and then beat en with clubs till the filter separates from the wood. This done, the sack formed of the bark Is turned Inside ont and pulled down till the wood Is sawn off, with the exception of a small piece left to form the bottom of the sack. These sacks are In general use in West, ern India. Ilorsn't Trnat Man. A naturalist says that In captivity elephants always stand up when they sleep, but when In the Jungle, their own land and home, they He down. Ths reason given for the difference between the elephant in captivity mid freedom la that the elophant never acquires- complete cennunce in his keepers, and always longs for llls-ny, We have n(rtlced that married woman who are kept occupied don't exdta aa much sympathy aa the Idle ones, for the reason that they don't bar dnw to pin, and do Juaoca to It I. 7 r: O