HOW I FOUGHT "I have heard a great deal about cats and timers, their similarity of aperies, their Insatiable desire for Wood. Hut I used to think that cata were made to suffer for the ln of their relative tigers, a was difficult for me ti imag ine how such a domestic, friendly, coo ing creature as the cat usually Is could turn out to he a 'blond-seeking beam. Ordinarily the cat rubs against one, seeks friendship, loves to be stroked and asks to be petted, liut the horrible beast which attacked me has upset all my preconceived Ideas about tats, says Tfvette Guilbert in the New York Jour nal. Perhaps that cat was an excep tion. 1.7 pon Inquiry, however, I find the exceptions rather numerous. The hor rible beast flew at me without provo cation. X was alone. As Ill-luck would have It, no one was within call. The cat's eyes glared like fiery balls. It showed Its tiger-like teeth. It hissed forth sounds such aa are heard when one throws water upon the Are. Jt wagged its tail with fiendish de light. Then followed a terrific- spring, the brute evidently Intending to land upon my throat Nature has endowed me with very Ion garniH. The gestures occasioned by my call ing have strengthened these arms. I had no weapon of defence. With my arm I struck out against Ihe cat. Fortunately I did not lose my head. The great thing was to prevent the rat from getting a grip on me. This I knew. I struck with all my might. No prize fighter ever mustered up all his force with more energy than I. Prize fighters usually contend for a championship. I thnught I was fighting for my life. The fxiliceman who fought two cats recently in Paris was armed with a sword. He- lunged and parried as tho' he were fighting a duel. He pierced their foodies with his sabre. Itut sword less as I was, what could I do? Merely keep op the fight as long as the strength f my great arms lasted. I cannot de scribe the fight by rounds, for there was no respite. It was a case of con tinuous action. Bvery secind I hoped would bring some one to my assistance. A!aj, no one came! Even my maid, who rarely leaves me, was not within the. sound of my voice. On (his occa sion every one seemed to have deserted me. I began to think what an awful fa.te waa about to befall me. An artist of my standing to be killed by a cat! Perish the thought! I struc k the brute a terrific blow. H daggered; it rallied. It tnade one su preme Jump at my throat. instead of LOST TRIBE IN Thomas Campbell's vision of "The Ixmt Man" came near being realized In the history of the trile of Eskimo recently discovered by Captain Cro mer, commander of an Arctic what iner vessel, on .Southampton Island, In the north end of Hudson bay. These people are less than I'M) In number, ttnd they believed that they were the only human beings on the earlh. For more than 400 years they had been ohut up in that lonely retreat, which is about thi size of the state of Maine, living in the must primitive style. ln-crr-dible as It may seem, not ,a single iirthle Introduced on the American continent since its discovery by Co lumbus was found o nthls island. Captain Cromer obtained a large col lection of the weapons and household effects used by this strange tribe. This collection has Is-en secured by the American Museum of Natural History of New York, and It will soon be placed on exhibition In the east wing of that great Institution. These Eskimo speak a language dif ferent from that employed by the Ks kimo of the far North, and different from any other language known, but their size, color and habits proclaim lhcm undoubtedly members of the name general family. The men and women are clothed alike, in Jackets and trousers' of deer and sealskin. The Jacket Is hooded, with openings for the face unci hands. The women- fashion the skin into clothing and footwear. Hewing Is done with bone needles and thread of sinew from the seal. Among their hunting weapons the bow and arrow, plays an Important port in shooting land animals. The bow Is of Tmril, wrapped with twisted (jlnews; tho arrows uru pointed wlih chipped flint. How und arrows are carried In a bow case and quiver that Is slung on the buck. In stature they are of medium height and robust and miiseulnr, but the wo men are much shorter than the men, ' pccaslonally almost dwarfish. Much of their food Is eaten raw, but they cook It when convenient. They will split and devour the buck, fat and flesh from tho body of a dee.r killed In tho ehnse und while the fibers are jet quivering. Seal's fat and seal's blood are put Into a dish and stewed. This oily li quid Is used like butter. Lean meat Is dipped Into it to make It more pal atable. Kulaks or skin canoes are the water craft of these people. They are from lg to 30 feet In length. In the middle is & hole for the body, the rest being entirely decked over. The chief outfit of the Kulak Is a harpoon and spear, which are used In the hunt for whales tnd Ktli. These are from sli to eight A WILD CAT. landing Uon the desired spot, it suc ceeded in sticking its fangs into my arm. The pain was Intense, and the cat was furious to the lust degree. I now suf fered a twofold torture one physical, the other mental. The latter was the worse. I feared that hydrophobia was before me that I should go mad. The thought occurred to me that It were better to die bravely fighting even a cat than to be locked up forever in a mad house. With my unemployed hand I grasped the animal's throat. I got my thumb' on the apple. I squeezed and squeezed as never wo man squeezed before. The ferocious light of the cat's1 eyes was soon replaced by a glassy stare. It loosed lis hold. I flung the brute from me, rushed to the door, slammed It, anil I, Yvett Guilbert, was safe! That feline fight was the most terri ble I have ever had In my life. I have had many struggles. I used to suffer keenly when I knew I had talent and people would, not listen because I was not pretty. 81111 I fought my way with out fear. I cannot say such was the case In my fight with the cat; for I was very much afraid, although my pres ence of mind did not desert me even for an Instant, and this proved to be my salvation. It Is said that women and cats do not like each other. I can well believe it after the attack which the cat made upon me. We frequently hear the expression "Worse than the furies is a woman scorned." I can only say that I did not scorn the cat which attacked me, yet it was more than any furies which the human mind can conjure up. Hence I Infer that an Infuriated cat Is more spiteful than a scorned woman. Cross-tempered women are called cats although my unhappy experience goes to show that feminine passion com pared with feline rage Is not even as moonlight unto sunlight. A cat has thirty teeth. It has six incisors above and six be low. It has four molars above and four below, I felt as though the whole thirty were stuck in me. The physicians will not admit this, but, no matter, I am speaking of my feelings and not of Ihe mere dental marks. It was fortunate for me that there Is a Pasteur institute in Pai ls. Otherwise I might now be foaming at the mouth or in a madhouse or in the giave. How ever. I a mhere, safe and sound, firmly resolved to avoid the Ire of rats for the future and to advise my friends to do likewise. THE FAR NORTH. feet long, having sharp points of Ivory which become detached when the game is idiTced. The long line attucrhed gives ample scope for play until the animal Is exhausted. On land the sled drawn by a dog learn of from seven to ten animals Ih the only means of travel. The hiirness consists of two large nooses, placed one above Ihe other and Joined by two perpendicular straps four or five inches In length, so placed as to allow tho heads of the dogs to pass through, so that one noose will lie aloag the back and the other between the legs. The body harness Is made of un dressed sealskin, which does not chafe. The whip are of plaited thonga of sealskin some twenty-five to thirty feet long, and the natives possess a surprising dexterity In the use of these whips, being able to flick the ear of a particular sluggish dog the full dis tance of the length of the lush. The huts or houses of the Eskimo are made by putting together the great jawbones of right whales, which are covered Willi skins and seem more fit ting for the lairs of animals than for the homes of human beings. There are no windows In the houses, only a small opening about two and a half feet high serving for a door. Each building is occupied by several families. Walrus and seal meat Is stored away In caves excavated In the snow. As tho temperature never rises above the freezing point, the meat soon freezes scdld and keeps Indefinitely. They have no furniture; the side effect used In housekeeping are a limestone lump for cooking, a dish made of the same ma terial to hang above the lamp, and a few cups made of whalebone. The most Indispensable of these uten sils Is the lamp, the only source of heat ami light. One of the chief duties of the women Is to prevent the lamp from going out. The lamp Is utilized for cooking" and drying clothes, skins, boots and mittens, which ure hung around on a ruck of bones. Cooking Is done in an oblong dish or pot suspended above tin) flame. In thli their meal of blublier and fat and whalemeot Is always kept slowly sim mering. The people are obliged to make their cooking vessels and lamp out of slabs of limestone, glued togeth er with n. mixture of grease and deer blood. The lamps are burned by mean of wicks of moss arranged around the ed ge. m At a meeting of the Baptist Social union In Boston last week an announce ment was made formally of an offer ot John D. Itockefeller to five H 50,000 to Newton Theological seminary, provided a like sum be raised by the Institution. ST. HELENA lyondon. March 27. Napoleon, em peror of France; Cronje, farmer-soldier of the Transvaal. Wlih almost a cen tury between them, they unile in con ferring a sad Immortality upon the name of a lonely mid-Atlantic isle. St. Helena! The name sclls tragedy. In 181.",, broken ambition; In lOOO, crush ed patriotism. For It is here on this volcanic speck In the ocean that Eng land cages Ihe rnighllest fo her beaten enemies. Seek it out cm a map and see how remote it is from th world 1,2.'0 miles from the coast of Africa, 1,800 miles from South America, the same from Cape Town, 4.0.'.0 miles from London, of which it has been a dependency for 250 years. Its extreme length is ten and a quar ter miles, its extreme breadth eight and a quarter miles, its area 45 square miles. Its population 5,000 human be ings, three-fifths of whom are clustered In Jamestown and innumerable goats. The islan dis an ancient volcano, thrust up in fire from the floor of the sea, long since dead and cold, some what enlarged by the slow processes of nature and garmented not alone with an Indigenous flora so varied as to be the delight of the botanist, but also with exotics from all climes, so that It presents the aspect of a botanical garden the oak growing side by side wlih the bamboo and banana, and date palms shooting skyward from fields of English gorse. St. Helena was quite a flourishing island before the Suez canal waa open ed. It was a port of call for ocean traffic between Europe and the Orient. With the Junction of the lted sea and the Mediterranean It becai.ie as un fashionable as Cape Hern will be when the Nicaragua canal Is open for busi ness. Cronje and his 4.0"O burghers will al most double the population, which is n shadow of what It wus in Ihe pre-cnnnl P"rlod. One of the most Interesting residents Is M. Moillleau, the French consular agent In charge of Ixuigwood, Napole on's home. There he lives with bin family, religiously precc rving nil me mentoes of the r.rreror. An Important feature of the place Is the garrison. II Is quartered In bar racks on I-adiler Hill so named on ac count of the wooden sleps by which the eminence of Hmo foci must lx waled from the seaside. The highest point of the) Island Is 2,704 feet above the sea level. This Is Din mi's peak. It has one near rival, High peak, rising 2. (Via feet. Both ore tusks of the principal ridge, the north ern rim of a vast crater which belched fire thnusnnds of years ago. There Is a legend that England se ized the island before It was cold, but this Is untrue. She grabbed It when the Dutch and Portuguese found they could do noth ing with It. On August 7, 1815, when Ihe world was reverberatln with the echoes of Waterjpo, a boat waa rowed Into Ply- j MM .11 -- " " " AND ITS HISTORIC mouth Harbor from H. M. S. lieller ophon to H. M. S. Northumberland. 74 guns, flying the pennant of Hear Ad iniial Sir George Cockburn, undpr or ders for St. Helena. In the -'t.-rn of the boat sat he who was designated in England's official papers "Napoleon Bonaparte." The an c hor was weighed and the Northumber land stood out to sea, bearing forever from Europe the man whose ambition her shores could not confine. One month and ten days later the Northumberland dropped anchor In the harbor of Jamestown. Napoleon was escorted ashore and found a lodging in the town. Sir George Cockburn selected as the exile's residence, Longwood, the coun try seat -of the lieutenant-governor. Thither next day the fallen emperor cantered along the lovely road, escort ed by his followers and a guard of English officers. On December 9 the French exiles moved to Longwood. With Napoleon were Count and Countess Montholon and their child, Baron Gourgaud; the Count de Las Cases and his young son, Captain Piohtkowskl and Dr. O'Meara, the young: Irish surgeon whom Napo leon had picked from the British naval service as his private medical attend- ant. Caunt and Countess Bertram! and their three children were quartered in a little house at a distance. Dr. O'Meara used only portions of his diary In compiling his book. The entire MS. he bequeated to Louis Mail lard's descendants In the V'nlted States. Those parts that O'Meara did not dare to publish are at length be ing given to the world in the pages of the Century Magazine. They show that Napoleon was dissat isfied with the treatment accorded him. He found fault with Sir C.eorge Cock burn because of bis seamnnlike lack of ceremony, which O'Meara endeavored valniy to explain away. Hut this was mild compared lo his haired of Sir Hudson lyowe, who In April. 1M6, suc ceeded Cockburn as governor of St. IMctia. ' "I am convinced," he said, "that this governor, this chief of jailers, has been sent out on purpose to poison me or put me to death In some way or an other, or under some pretext, Ly Lord Cnstlereagh. "I had reason tn oipliln of the ad miral, but he, though he treated me roughly and was not inclined lo do as much good us lay In tls power, never behaved In such a manner as this new Jailer, this Prussian more than Eng lishman." In such mnnner, more Indolent and f rt-t ful as the weary years passed, did Napoleon live, until In 1X21 he died from a cancer In the stomuch. Hut Napoleon was not the only royal prisoner to fret away his days on England's prison Isle. General Cronje will encounter there two princes with whom he may have had former ac quaintance Dinl Zull, son of Cetewayo. PRISONERS. and I'ndabuko. brother of the fame redoubtable monarch. There were many disturbances aftei the Zulu king's death. His people, tht Usutos, rose against their British pro tectors and were suppressed. Cete wayo's son and brother were exiled tc St. Helena for taking part in thy re bellion. Prince Dinl is described us having a noble bearing and courteous manners He and his followers make their home in a house known as Rosemary. Four years ago the Natal government consented to Dinl Zulu's release and a steamer was sent out from England tc take all the exiles back to Zululand. Transported with Joy, the blacks made preparations to leave their island pris on. At the fast no,nt the British war ship Swallow arhved with an order countermanding the first. There had been a fresh outbreak between r the Boers and Zulus, and it was deemed an inauspicious momnet to restore Dinl to his own warlike people. The present war makes still more re mote this prince's procpeet of liberty. In sending Cronje to St. Helena the British military authorities are prob ably Influenced by a variety of consid erations. In the first place. Cape Col- ony, with its threatenings of an upris ing of the Cape Dutch, and with the pronounced Boer sympathies of Afri kanders lof Dutch; parentage, is no longer a safe place in which to keer prisoners of the Importance of Cronje and the men who defended themselves so heroically against Ixrd Roberts' great army. The most secure place for Cronje upon the arrival at Cape Town was deemed on board a British ship, but this for mof Imprisonment prompt ly called out continental criticism, and possibly on that account, but more probably with view to the greatest possible security against rescue, the famous1 Boer Is now to be sent to Great Britain's inidncean prison. That not only the Boer general, but also his men, are to be deporte d to this prison, 2,000 miles from Brazil and 1,400 from Africa, with Ascension Island, lis near est neighbor, 700 miles away, Is a great compliment to the prisoners. Tin fact, also, that It is announced that nu prisoners will Vc eiclmngad ft a eltil fvrtbfr tfifccl fo the valor of art en. emy which hits tested Brlt'.sh couraga and generalship more severely than It has been tried since Balaklava and Malakoff. e. - . Pretty fancy waists are mads of al ternate rows of Inch-wide velvet and tucks running around the waist and sleevrs. The rows of tucks fllll an Inc h, wide space. Other waists have (he rib bon running lengthwise, with Us width In tucks running across them. A pretty silk waist has narrow tucks set some distance apart, running lengthwise of the waist, and over this bands of the silk stitched on diagonally from the shoulder to the waist. Khaki Is the latest EiuJIIsh Shade It. faahlciieetkli tatt BURGLAR 1IO0D0OS. One would hardly imagine that tha irofessional thief would be swayed la lis doings by superstition; it is difTl ;ult to conceive, for instance, an armed jurglar, a man who breaks Into your aouse with the fixed intention of pitt ing a bullet Into you or hitting you. ver the head with a Jimmy If you sur prise him and try to prevent his es cape, being deterred from carrying out iiis nefarious plans by the sight of a black cat, yet this is one of the small things of life which are regarded by thieves as sufficiently important to up set a well-laid scheme. Some three or four years ago a sans of three men had decided te break into the office of a large factory and make in attempt on the safe. At certain times, as they had fouad, a large sum of money was kept in the safe for a day or two, and on this occasion they had resolved to divert this money from going into its proper channel, and tarn the stream toward themselves. All the circumstances seemed favora- and not far from the railway, where the rattle of passing trains would drown any noise they might make, and where It was highly improbable that they would meet anyone a they made their way late at night to the srene of action. They had nearly, reached th factory when a cat started from a cor ner and ran across their path, and by the light of the moon which peeped forth at that very moment, they sawt that it was black; immediately they, halted. After some discussion one of them refused to proceed, and went bacfe; while the others, although! they" were nervous at the thought of m luck, wen on. They were cangfot in the very act of drilling- a hole into the safe door, and semtencecj to long terms. The sound of a child sobbing at night In a house near the one into which. hA intends to break is quite enough, td make many a burglar go back home; li is a sure sign of misfortune. Why thia should be so regarded is not easy te determine, but, perhaps-, the idea ot Innocence usually associated with In lants has some indeflned effect upon this hardened heart of the criminal. There are some who regard the 0Uu den stopping of a clock as an intima-1 tion that some friend of relative ha died at that minute; in the same way, if a clock stops in a room in yrhlca a burglar is at work he will conside it advisable to leave the premises with' out delay. This occurred to a man wha was recently convicted, and he sor rowfully remarked to the policeman who took him into custody that if he had paid heed to the J!l omen, he woujd just have got clear before the mastei of the house returned. If a cracksman's path is crossed by a blind dog, or if a dog of any kind fol low him, he will give up the Job if he yields to his own inclinations; there is just as much chances of disaster in these circumstances as there is in "working" on a Friday or en the thirteenth of the month. To kick against a piec of coa.1 in tht street is a sure sign of misfortune should a thief attempt to continue his professional duties cm that day, unless disaster be warded off -by some lucky omen. 1 It is but rarely that a pickpocket will steal anything from a blind man. One can hardly imagine that the man's af fliction and helplessness appeal to th finer feelings of one who would nol hesitate to steal the last penny from the pocket of a poor woman; yet, as matter of fact, it is because he is con vinced that a long run of bad luck will dog his steps as a punishment for hav ing taken advantage of the man's lu firmity. THE DQBIE STEER. One of the notable exhibits that win represent Texas at the Paris exposition this year Is the Dobie steer, which started on February 10th across the wa ter to take its place in this great show; This steer, which belongs to Mr. J. Ml Doble, proprietor of the Kentucky ranch at Ramires. Tex., goes by the name of Champion, but is known throughout' the state as the Dobie steer. It was calved in 1891 near the Mexican border and was bought by Mr. Dobie In 1S94 in a herd of 1.000 head of cattle. It measures fifteen hands and weighs between: 1,600 and 1,700 pounds. Tht horns measure from point to point nine feet and seven Inches, and they could easily be made to measure ten feet it taken off the steer nml steamed and straightened somewhat. When th steer Is standing in a natural position on level ground the tips of his horns are fully six feet from the ground. While; the Dobie steer In on senst represents Texas, In another it Is" ho more representative of tne present ca.t- tlcjJiiteTChis of the Male than the mam moth and mnstadon ate representative! of the animals of this country. The long horn, of whioh the steer Is an ex ample, is as practically extinct as aro the monsters of tho Miocene period. Time was when long horns approaching those of this steer were common enoit,li but now one could travel all over Texas without finding another animal with pair of horns like these. He la the last survivor of a tribe erf monster horned tattle, whose place has been token by better blood under the operation of the law of the survival of the fittest, and he goes to the Tsris exposition not as a specimen of the cattle now In Texas1,, but of those that formerly roamed In Creat herds over the prairies from thl .led river to tho Rio Grande.' The siie of a man's bank (account haa nothing to do with hit dlnMralgnt u man.