n t ts a smut nCTi. The tvnlrdeaele atarepeea) nreaa. An enterprising individual haa seen fit to spend koine time collecting facta and figure concerning the avoirdu pois ol Minie of the Queens of Europe and baa proud that, according to tha atandurd of the sculptors, which dif fers from tbut of tbe dress maker, not one of the Royal women has a beautiful tig u re. Queen Victoria is the ghorteiit adult sovereign in tbe world. - Her Majefly ia only 4 ft. 11 in. high and weiJt 171 pounds. Her bust and bips meXf" ore 44 in. and SO in. respective while her waist is 35 in. The tallest Queen in Europe ia thl young Wilhelinina, of Holland. Sh ia only 19 year old, but her height I no less than 5 ft. 5ft in. She ia light ly built, with a weight of only 131 lbs., but haa tbe buat measurement 01 a Juno 42 in. Her waist measure! only 21ft in. and her hips 40 in. Ha Majesty of Holland ia, in other word WO III aavisea as to lace nerseti mom cruelly. The young sovereign buat measurement, despite her youth: la surpassed by that of none of tb Queens except Margherita of ItaJ, and our own revered Kuler. The heaviest Queen of Europe Margherita of Italy, "the Pearl Savoy." bhe turns the scales at 171 lba., but her height, S ft. i in., enable! her to "carry otf" her stoutness an to preserve tbe carriage of a youn, woman. Her waist measurement o M in. and her bust meausre of 40 it show that despite her advancing years, hhe still retains a queenl figure. Her hips measure 48 in. He noble profile still gives evidence o tiie beauty which she possessed aa girl. A shade taller than Margherita if 4 1. : 1 1 1 1 . . l ujc uiuic wiuowjr uecn iiegeut a Bpaln. She is S ft. 5ft in. in heighi With a weight of 147 lbs. Her bua nd bips measure 36 in. and 40 in. rt apectively, and her waist ia a boil Si in. One of tbe most superb figure; among European royalties is that d Natalie, the romantic Queen of Servii Bhe is 5 ft. 4 in. high, with a bui measure of 38 in. and a waist measui of 22 in. Her hips are 40 in. roum and ahe weighs 130 lbs. Queen Sophia of Sweden and Quea Marie Henrietta of Belgium are ead It 4 in. in height, and their bui measure is 36 in. Queen Sophl weigns 140 lbs. and Queen Marie lbs. more. Vhe Swedish Queen pol aeasea on the whole, however, thT more stylish, if less natural, figur With a waist measure of 24 in., and hip measure of 38 in., while trf Queen of the Belgians measures 27 i around tbe waist and 40 in. round tl hips. Ihe Queen of Portugal and tlJ Czarina of Russia are closely paired i the matter of size. Queen Amelia i older and has a fuller an; mofl'"m! tronly figure, bhe boaa bust meas ure of 35 in. and a waist measure of 11 in., but some time aho she gave up wearing corests, and the increase of her waist measurement has not been recorded. The Czarina is only 32 in. around the bunt and 22 in. around tbe waist. Their hip measurement is or waa the aame 38 In. The Czarina ia 5 ft. 2ft in. tall and weighs 120 lbs., r hile Queen Amelia weighs 123 lba. and ia half an inch taller. BVVIXO TIP FROJI CBOOKS. elagalar Policy Paraned by the Beak or England. All aorta of odd incidents occur in England's banking circles, where strictest measures are taken aa to protect treasure from the robbers and burglars. Some of the institu tions pay cash for information of, Sad in some casea from, the crimin als themselves. The iank of England's yearly budget always contains an ex pense item due to such outlays. The first experiment of the kind dates back to lb50, when the directors of the bank listened to a startling propo- : sition made by a "ditch digger." I The laborer told the directors that 1 he had discovered a new and unsus pected method of getting into the cellar vaults where the gold and sil ver bars were kept, and that he would sea his secret to them for money. The directors hestitated, believing that they bad taken every precaution against loss from the vaults, In put ting up heavy masonry, with plenty of iron bars, and by manning the building with armed watchmen. But finally they granted the man, who seemed to talk fairly, a chance to try bia plan, and a night waa named for the undertaking. At the appointed time a committee of the directors deacended to the eel lar and heard a peculiar scratching sound under their feet. Two hours lster the door opened and the ditch digger bobbed up serenly, like the evil spirits in the spectacular drama. Ail around them luy bars of precioua metal, totaling in value 3,000,000. The man explained satisfactorily how it was done, and as a reward the directors assured liim an income for life on an Investment of $10,000. The crook was content, and it is believed he remained honest ever afterward. But other cracksmen were tempted by his luck to try the same game, and the directors were inundated with suggestions and tips on new methods of burglary and how to prevent them. Among other things they paid $20,000 for a process, invented by a young chemist, for copying the ink, paper, water marks and designs of the bank notes so perfectly as to defy detec tion. The directors found they could use his system more satisfactorily and more profitably thnn their own in the production if their currency. Despite the fact that theee expendl turea have run up into big figures in the last half century, the directors of today say that all the money was well Inveeted. The Boston Herald. "What are you laughing atf aatd erne one, aa the grocery clerk hong tip the receiver. "At Mrs. Newblood. She has lust telephoned for a pound of ft e'ajeeh tea. Detroit Free Prase. tTMIC aw Term BUga to mm Applied ta Vskna4t4 Cauls. George Maverick, a prominent citi een of San Antonia and one of tha largest real ettate owners in the state of Texas, has been visiting in this city, says tbe El Paso (Tex.) Times. The gentleman is a son of the noted Samuel Maverick, one of the old pio neers of western Texas. The latter waa a shrewd and far-seeing business man, and knew that the day would come when Texas real estate would be valuable, so be began to buy up all steer," and thia ia bow the term Mav erick originated and began to ba ap plied to ait unbrandad toak. The term took with the cowboy nasi stockmen, and It waa not long before it was in universal use throughout tha American continent. George Maverick, who haa just paid a visit to Li Paso, has papers to aup atantiate the above facts and which entirely exonerate his father from any suspicion of wrong doing. i;ty op iiovia wohen. A Peculiar Type Unlike Tbal Which Is DlMloctlv of the JVjrth Northern beauty, however fine mar be the line of its contour, is never, ' for good or evil, a mere beauty of the body, a thing beginning with itself and ending with itself; it contains al waye a suggestion; it is haunted by a soul; it leaves for its complexion some thing to the imagination. But in ths beauty of Roman women there is no trace of spiritual beauty, none of the softness of charm; it is tbe calm, as-, aured, unquestionable beauty of the ' flesh. There are faces which should be seen always in pure outline, for they are without melting curves, deli cate and variable shades or anything but their own definite qualities, as they are in themselves. 'J he faces of Roman women of the upper cluKses are! cold, hard, finished and impenetrable aa cameos. In a face which is at all beautiful you will not find a line which ia not perfect, and this elegance and aureness of line goes with that com' plexion which is the finest of all com plexionspure ivory and which car ries with it tbe promise of a tempera ment in which there is all the Bubtlety of fire. The distinction between the properly aristocratic and the strictly plebian face is, I think, less marked in Rome than in any city. Almost all Roman women have regular faces, the profile clearly cut and in a straight line; black hair, often with deep tones of blue in it and sometimes curling crisply; dark eyes, often of a fine uni form brown, large, steady, profound, with that unmeaning profundity which means race, and which one sees in tbe Jewess, the gypsy. They have a truly Roman dignity, and beneath that the true fire without which digni ty ia but the comely shroud of a corpse, and though there is not a trace in them of the soft, smiling, cat like air of the women of Venice, and not much of the vivid, hardy, uncaring provocativeness of the women of Na ples, they are content to let you see in them that reasonable nearness to the animal which no Itnllan woman Is ashamed to acknowledge.. They have often a certain inasHiveness of build which makes a child look like a young woman and a young woman like a matron; but, for Italians, they are tall, and though one sees none of the trim Neapolitan waists, it is but rarely that one sees, even among the market women bringing in their bas kets on their heads, tlinxe square and lumpish figures which roll so com fortably through Venice. llarper'i Magazine. Bill "And yon say that you won't allow a fellow to throw himself head first from the East River bridge? Jill "That's what I aaid. It seerai U be the only kind of a dive that th slice Interfere with around New Terk." Yonkers 8teU.aman. ItlTU THAU Ml CMatrtM Wkirt na Telle aa (4 Arm r n.ra ValaeThaa Ummmf .1 i- i i : i ; t . t i much stress on the value of silvertl und gold, says a writer in Pearson' Weekly, but there is an island chiej lain out in tbe Pacific who will ba neither, nor will any of tbe 200,0OC people over whom he bolda swa: This chief is To-Kinkin, the ruler the Bismarck islands. In the land of To-Kinkin nothin food but sh I- la 21 d r -Ire "Sne other kinds of shell money n Hse there, but the circulation is limit and they are not like the dworra, ft, tamer of tke people. ; pint, there is little black aL In which a hole Is punched, andit lg put on a string. Ten inchea iaortb fonrpence. Thia is known HTpeie r f?!s monejTtenbf!, ,other shell, a ten-inch string of which ia worth from 8 to 10 ahillings. There is a pig's tail on the end of the string, and thia adds to the value, as a man wii. soon find if he haa a string of it and happena to lose the pig's tail. The pig is a highly honored animal in these islands. That is why his tail, beautifully colored, adds value to such coin current in the realm. But the people of the Bismarck is lands are not the only ones who dis pense with gold and silver coinage. In the Malay peninsula, for instance, coins resembling small wafers are made from the resinous juice of a tree. They are probably of smaller value than any other coins of the world, 1,000 of them being estimated to be worth only a penny. The islanders of hanta Barbara still use shells, and a good horse may still be bought for a string of them. Among the aborigines of California a species of abalone shell was so highly estimated that a horse could be had for a single specimen. Among other peculiar forms of cur rency used elsewhere may be men tioned red feathers in certain other is lands of the Pacific ocean, cubes of tea in Tartary, and iron shovels or hoes among the Malagasy. Corn has been the medium of exchange in the remote parts of Europe from the time of the ancient Greeks to the present day. In Norway corn is even de posited in banks and lent and borrow ed. Egga are said to have circulated in tbe Alpine valleys or (Switzerland and dried cod in the colony of Newfound land. Salt haa been circulated not only in Abyssinia, but in Sumatra, Mexico and elaewhere. Copper bars or skewers were used in Greece. In Thibet and some parts of China little blocka of com pressed tea are used as money. envelope Hot Modish. The latest fad among those who can afford to be faddish is the disuse of the envelope in correspondence. We have gone back to the old days, when red wafers and aealing-wax were all that custom demanded or knew. Mod ern faahion has produced wafers and wax to match paper heliotrope, rob-In's-egg blue, cerulean, lilac, fawn or cream. Large sheets are used for letters, i smaller size for notea and invitations When you receive a letter sent with out Ita envelope do not cut and alaah as you have been accustomed to do, but remove the wafers, break the seal and the writing will greet your eye untorn. The Sunday school class had Just finished singing "I want to be an an gel and with the angels stand," when the teacher, observing that one af the boys had not contributed his voice to swell the sacred refrain, said: "And you want to be an angel, too, deVt you, Johnny?4 Tee'm," answered Johnny, "hut not right away. I'd rather be a baseball layer a good deal lrat' aucaiarrc amy. g$tmi by eaaaral imki MMBk Vathar Mixed Drink Alan ' Oa the Rial to, ard, in fact, in many ethar portions of the town, tbe dispute aa to who was tbe originator of that most delectable of beverages, tbe gin rickey, still waxes hot. But here is an anecdote, says the New York Sun, which goes far to confirm tbe claim of Colonel Joe Rickey's friends that be and he alone was the author of thia most insidious of toddy. Last August, during the invasion of I'ortc Rico, the Missouri battery, which was made up entirely of Missouri boys, formed part of General Brooke's brig ade. They were stationed at Guayama, and one of the privates was young Hyde Rickey, Colonel Rickey's son. Now tbe captain of tbe battery was not st all popular with his men, a fact which haa been proved three times since the battery disbanded, aa each occasion the captain has been made the defendant in a stand-up flfht. In Porto Rico one of the men who jarred most raspingly upon his captain's nerves was young Rickey. After all the minor penalties had been exacted from him the captain finally Bent him down to General Brooke's headquarters with a message which LA; scribed him as incorrigible. Young ickey was taken to the general's a headauarters in fear and tremblinr. .Mle decided in his own mind that ii he got off with two years in Leaven worth he might consider himself ii jucny. xi e was oraerea into me gen V eral's room. While he stood trem i bling at attention the general gazed at him sternly. "Are you Colonel Rickey's son?" he asked. "Yea, sir." "You're the son of old Joe Rickey?" "Yes, sir." "The son of the man who invented the gin rickeyY" persisted General Brooke. "Yea, air." "Well, then, look here, young man," aid the general, sternly. "Just take my advice. Leave your father's mixed drinks alone until you get to St. Louis. If you don't, you'll get into trouble. Now don't let me bear of yon and your rickey's again. Go!" Storrettes. The following pretty little story ol England's future queen is vouched for, During the late visit of her royal highness the princess of Wales to hei country home she called at the houst of one of the most valued members ol ber household, with whom was then staying an aged relative, whom th princess had known for many years. This lady, being at present badly crip pled by rheuinatinm, apologized to the princess, saying: "i hope you will ex cuse me, ma'am; I can't curtsey, bul may I kiss your hand?" "No, indeed," waa the gracious princess' answer. "You shan t do that. I will kiss youi hand." And so, in very deed, she did Princess Charlotte and Princess Vic toria, sisters of tbe kaiser, recently participated in an occurrence which ia reflection on tbe airs assumed by somi Of the German nobility. Not long ago a servant in livery entered a local station and asked to have a compart ment in tbe next train to Berlin re served for two princesses. When thl train came all the compartments wer occupied. In one there was only a French woman, who was requested bj the guard to vacate the premises. Thu lady, however, stood on her rights ana declined to budge. The augus. pair, hearing of the trouble, came up and cried: "What's all this fuss about 1 Why, there's room enough here foi half a dozen," and got in forthwith. George Selwyn had a strange pas sion for seeing dead bodies, especially those of his friends. He would go any distance to gratify this pursuit. Lord Holland was laid up very ill at Hol land house shortly before his death. George belwyn sent to nsk how he was and whether he would like to see him "Oh, by no means!" Lord Holland an swered. "If I'm alive tomorrow I shall be delighted to see George and I know that if I am dead he will be delighted to see me." Positive He Didn't Have Them. In a certain Kentucky district ia which a company of volunteers was enlisted for the recent war with Spain, Says Lippincott's Magazine, military genius was somewhat intimately aa aociated with whisky drinking. In this neighborhood Lincoln's reply to the female society that objected form ally to Grant because he was said ta drink is still quoted with great gusto, "And, sah," Colonel Hardin, of Lex ington, still says triumphantly, "dogged if ole Lincoln didn t write back to know what brand of whisky Grant drank, as he would like to send a jug of ft to some other generals, sah." So it happened that Captain Clay, in command of the new com pany, frequently crooked his elbow In the good old Kentucky fashion. While the company was encamped at Greenville a few week ago some Charitable ladies of Philadelphia, or ganized for Red Cross work, forward ed tbe company a box of pajamaa for the sick soldiers. Not hearing from them, in due time the secretary tele graphed the captain of the company, "Vie are anxious to Know ii you got tne pajamas last week." .This tele grim was brought to Captain Clay as be waa cooling his brain with wet towels after a hard engagement with the officers of a Georgia company on the night before. Great was his indig nation, and he hastily dispatched his orderly to the telegraph office with his reply: "There la not a word of truth In the story. Must have been started by my political enemies. I ac knowledge I am not a total abstainer, but did not have the pajamaa laat week or any other time." Common mistakes. It Is a mistake to labor when you are not In a fit condition to do so. To think that the more a person eats the healthier and stronger he will become. To bto to bed at midnight and rise at daybreak, and Imagine that every hoar takes from Bleep is aa nour ffalMi, BISSKB IHCBBSOLL ' Hew the Cc-loael One lararlatedl Political Andleuce In Chicago. Tbe sudden death of Robert G. Ingersoll recalls the prominent posi tion he always occupied at Republi can national conventions and tiie eloquent speeches be made at those assemblages. Ingersoll was always in ueuiaud tu ij-.uj.e imu.1; a i g or politi cal speeches, but on account of bis agnostic news no j al ly ever dared to lion. innate liim for oflice. Only once did Jnger-Mill ever face an audi ence tbut compelled him to htop hi speech. It happened at tbe Republi can national convention at Chicago in IShfcK. The convention was meet ing in the Auditorium bul ding, whicn was not then completed, but bad been fitted up for tiie occasion. The convention bad been in session a day or so and the great contest for the nomination was on. Alison, Blaine, Harrison, ( t klium and a dozen more prominent Republicans were all in field. The balloting bad continued through several sessions and finally on Saturday night it was decided to take but one ballot and adjourn. This was done, but instead of leaving the great convention ball tbe delegates and audience remained seated and re solved themselves into a mass meet ing. It was understood before the speech es began that none of the speakers was to make any reference to the candidates for nomination by the convention, and al the early speakers kept to this understanding. Finally there were calls for Ingersoll and the great orator, who was on tbe platform, was introduced to the con vention. "Bob" had a great speech ready and started in to make it with his usual eloquence. But he bad hardly got started before he began an elaborate eulogy of one man and then said: 'This is Walter Q. Gresham. Instantly a storm of hisses came from the crowd in the Aduitorium, and al though the Illinois people tried te drown then with applause, the shouts and hisses of disaproval increased and Ingersoll stood dumbfounded on the platform. My seat in the press sec tion was within a few feet of the speaker and I never saw a man o rattled and overcome. His big, round face and bald head grew red with indignation and as the hisses increas ed the blood seemed to rush faster to his face until his head seemed almost purple. In vain did be try to quell the noise by raising his hand, but it only increased. He stopped and Iouk ed around at the gentlemen on the platform back of him and then started to speak again. This was only a sig nal for a renewed hissing. One by one the delegations began to leave their seats on the floor of tbe convention, and this seemed to add to Ingersoll's embarrassing position. He made the final effort to continue his speech, but by this time the up roar was so great that he was obliged to retire. The result was that there were no more speeches that night. It was always claimed by Mr. Inger soll that he never intended to make his speech a eulogy of Mr. Gresham, but that be intended to speak of all the candidates, but unluckily men tioned Gresham's name first. It waa not so much that Mr. Ingersoll had praised Mr. Gresham that angered the audience, but the fact that he had violated tbe distinct understanding that the speakers on that occasion were not to mention any of the candi dates or praise them individually. Ft ml Camp-meeting in America. "The effect of the McGee Brothers' preaching especially of John McGee at a Presbyterian quarterly meeting on the banks of Red river, in Ken tucky, was so startling, and seemed so clearly to indicate that it waa the result of Divine agency or some mys terious force possessed by the preacher, that the news of the occur rence spread rapidly in all directions throughout that part of the state, and attracted unbounded interest," write Clifford Howard in the July Ladies' Home Journal. "If it did not at once awaken a responsive religious feeling, It at least excited curiosity, and when it was learned that tbe McGee Broth ers were to hold a meeting at Russell- ville, Kentucky, a newly settled town in Logan County, near the Muddy river, persons from all parts of the adjoining country, irrespective of their religious beliefs or church alle giance, prepared to attend, it soon became evident that the four walls of a county meeting-house would not suf fice to hold the large numbers that were making ready to go to Russell ville. The problem thus presented was solved by determining to hold the meeting in the open air. Those com ing from a distance were prepared to camp; it would be no hardship to them to remain out of doors. The re cent experience at Red River had proved this. It was not expected by those who were coming that the lodg ing accommodations at the village of Russcllville would be sufficient by any means. Why, therefore, attempt to house the people? Prepare a camp ing ground, and let the meeting be a 'camp' meeting. This, then, was the origin of camp-meetings; and the firsl one held in America was held on the banks of the Muddy River, near Rus sellville, Ky., in the month of August, 1799 one hundred years ago. Not that religious worship had never be fore been held in tbe open air, but the special feature of camping out and the nature of the services made the camp-meeting a distinctive Institu tion, and characterized this particular gathering on the Muddy River as the first of its kind." "I am sorry to say," said Wind split Adolphus Wierry, the tragedian, "that Shakespeare has become a back number," "Well, I would take all the blame on my shoulders, if I were you, said the cauatic critic, consolingly. "Filipinos aren't worth $2 a head," said the man with the repeating style of mind. "Yea," answered the optimist; "but I hope for a time when some of their real estate la worth more than that feet" Bans at Ai ad Bonurahnrg. Tha Ban. Charles Francis AAnsas, daring one of hie pablie addressee, indulged in eome reminiscences of tha civil war and told bow be was lulled to sleep by tbe roar of battle. Ba said: "It was my fortnue at one period to participate in a number o. battles, among them none more famous or more fiercely contested than Antietam and Gettysburg. The mere utterance of those names stirs the imagination visions aribe at once of at Lack, re pulse, hairbreadth escapes, carnage and breathless suspense. There was indeed on those occasions enough and to spare of all these, but not, aa st chanced, ia my particular ease. Soma here will doubtless, remember that that English fox banting squire who has gained for himself a sort of iav mcrtality by following his hound over Mareby's fields, I think it was, while that epoch making battle waa going on. More yet will recall that plowman, twice referred to so dramat ically by Zola, intent apon his unin terrupted day's work near Sedan wham a dynasty waa reeling to its fall. "So my abiding recollection aa a participant ia both Antietam and Gettysburg is not ef the fierce agonf of battle at ita height, but the est-' joyment ef twe exceedingly refresh ing nape. As a statement this, I asa aware, ia calculated to startle rather rather than to excite admiration bat te the historian truth is sacred, and the truth ie a I have said. Neither doee the statement imply in any ex ceptional nerve or indifference ta danger on my part. I make no claim to anything of the sort. It happened in this wise: In the campaigns ef both Antietam and Gettysburg I waa an officer ia a regiment of cavalry, a mere subordinate, responsible oaky for obedience to ord era. "At Antietam, in tbe height of tha engagement, the division to which my regiment belonged was hurried across the narrow stone bridge at tha point where the little narrow river in tersects the Sharpsburg road and deployed on ita farther side. We were thein directly in front of Fita John Porter's corps and between it and the Confederate line, covering Sharpsburg. A furious artillery duel was going on to and fro above oar heads between the batteries of Por ter's command and those of -the enemy, we being down in the valley of the river; they on the higher ground. The Confederate batteries we could not see, nor eonld they see us. When we firstdeployed on the farther side of Antietam creek, it seemed as if we were uoomed so deafening waa the discharge of artillery on either side and bo incessant the hurling of projectiles as they passed both ways over us. Every instant, too, we ex pected to be ordered to advance on the Confederate batteries. "The situation was unmistakably trying. But no orders came, and n one was hurt. By degrees it grew monotonous. Presently to relieve oar tired horses we were ordered to dis mount, and, without breaking ranks, we officers sat down on the sloping hillside. No one was being struck. I was very tired. The noise was dead ening. Gradually it had on me a lull ing effect, and so I dropped quietly asleep asleep in the height of battle and between the contending armies! They woke me np presently to look after my horse, which was gracing somewhat wide, and, after a time, wa were withdrawn and sent elsewhere. I believe that day our regiment did not lose a man, scarcely a horse. Sneh is my recollection of that veritable charnel house,, Antietam and I waa a participantindeed, in the forefront of the battle. "Gettysburg wbb different, and yet, as respects somnolence, in my eaae much the same. During the daya pre ceding that momentous struggle my command had been frequently en gaged and suffered heavy loss. We who remained were but a remnant. On the 3d of July the division to which we belonged occupied the high, par tially wooded ground on the right of the line, covering the army's flank and rear. It was a bright July day, hot and with white elouds slowly rolling across the sky, premonitory of a thun derstorm during the later afternoon. "From our position the eye ranged over a wide expanse of uneven coun try, fields broken by woods, showing nowhere any signs of an army move ment, much less of conflict. A quiet, midsummer, champaign country. Neither our lines nor those of the en emy were visible to us, and the sounds of battle were hushed. Waiting for orders and for action, we dismounted out of regard for our horses aa wel as ourselves and sat or lay upon tha turf. Inured to danger by contact long and close and thoroughly tired In body as overwrought in mind, we listened for the battle to begin, and shortly after noon the artillery open ed. "We did not know it, we could ace nothing in that direction, but it cov ered the famous advance nf Htnlratt'i Virginia division upon Meade'e center that wonderful, that unsurpassed feat of armsand just then, luued by the incessant roar of tbe cannon, while tne late oi tne army and the nation trembled in I hp hnlaiiM t,a - crisis of the great conflict, I dropped quietly nsicep. it was not neroic, but it Wan. T Jinlll PRuniallv wal Iknnnk by no means war as imagined in the wuikioomi oi ine meoreuc nisionun. Yet. aa An 4fifKvl.li.nl iu1iiim fin bim it has its value." St. Louis Globe- .Democrat. American Millionaires. An article in Ainslle's Magazine for June states that there are today in America 4,000 millionaires, 1,400 af whom are in New York City. Of thia number 1,050 are simple, ordinary mil lionaires, 189 are double millloaaircs, six are worth $40,000,000, one Is worth 150,000,000, one Is worth $78,000,000, and three are worth over $100,000,000 aseh. The same aathority states that la 1MT New Yark contained only tea milUanairea and thai the riebeat a these, William Aetar, waa worth ealy I.: V? A,,. 4 4 ;'-' 1?