The novel method of propelling bal loons, proposed by Dr. T. D. Cooke of the British Aeronautical Institute, la an Imitation of tbiit of fishes. These animals propel themselves In a wavy Hue by the use of tall ami head, a stroke of the tni! from side to aide, forcing " the body "forward, and the bend coiin terbaluuelng Hie tendency to veer from a direct course. Two propellers, one on each Hide, would be plucid near the rear end of the navigable balloon, with a rudder at the forward end. Al ternate motion of the propellers would give pr gress in a wavy line with less re.slntai.ee than would be encountered 'lu a direct line, and the rudder would prevent turning aside. Both in France aud Cermatiy wagons and olniiibiiH-'.s run by electric trolley wires are now in at b ast two places, at Konigstein. Germany, and between Fontaine Ideii and Samols, France. The plan diners from Unit of ordinary trolley-cars mainly lu the absence of rails carrying the wheels of the vehicles. "The na,'.ns can be run over a street pavement or a country road, and can turn out to a lateral distance of about ten feet ill order to pass other vehicles. In Die I'mich system the wagons are towed along by a self-propelled motor trolley upon the wires alongside the road. In the German system trains composed of several cars, or wagons, can be used, the steering being effected with the front wheels of the leading car. The whorls of hair on the coats of horses and other animals, snys Dr. Wal ter Kldd, of the Zoological Society of Ixnidon, may be called the animal ped ometers, because they register the loco motive activities of the animals on whose bodies they are found. The best examples and the greatest number of these hairy whorls and crests are found on the domestic horse. A notable In stance Is the graceful feathering that extends along the hollow of the flank, dividing the trunk of the animal from the hind quarters. There are also crests and whorls on the horse's chest and other parts of Its bridy. A sttldy of the action of the underlying muscles ex plains the origin of these peculiarities In the lay of the hair, and furnishes the justification for calling them pedo meters, although the analogy Is, of course mere superficial. At the tidal-power station of Plou manach, on the northern coast of France, the difference of the tide level la about twenty feet. The storage res .ervolr Is a natural pond of four acres, 'having the form of a triangle, with the base toward the shore, and In the embankment separating this from thi ea are automatic gates, which open when the level of the sea rises higher than the water In the pond, and are closed by the weight of the water In the pond when the tide recedes. The two water-wheels of the station drive dynamos, which, aided by storage bat teries, fcre used for electric lighting. A prominent British engineer, James Swinburne, foresees the failure of this and all other platiR for using the tides as a source of electric power, on ac count of the great expense of working turbines on variable prc.-suies or any kind of storage. IDEAS IN HOME DECORATION. Comfort and Good Timte More Ieir able than Stj-lc nml Kntcrprise. Women are naturally decorators. Let a home which has been the pride and happiness of a woman lone her, and pass entirely Into the hands of men, and the change which follows 1 strik ing. Bui Instinctive as the talent seems to le, It Buffers from lack of training. In how many parlors will you find really beautiful or artistic decorations? .Many, doubtless, are magnificent, and are filled with carpi Is and draperies thai cost a fortune, with chairs and lounges that are upholstered In gorgeous stuffs and built of expensive wo ids, yet the lasting Impression of such parlors Is that of being crushed by the luxury they display. Other parlors are museums -and bad ly arrang d at that. Cah.es of curios, hangings from every part of the world, books, vases, carvings, china and eop tper, all collected wlili little Idea of ar 'raylng their Individual beauties to make a harmonious whole. Such n par lor may express Its owner's pulsion for bric-a-brac, but betrays a total lack of decotallve knowledge. In a third style of pailor you will find the "solid comfort" Idea tret hul to its farthest limits, snys the Philadelphia "" Ledger. Bare walls, velvet carpet, swept till the pile is almost brushed away; old armchairs, a leading lamp, ,au untidy heap of books but not a trace of real beauty anywhere. The desire to make it beautiful is expressed 'in lis cleanliness and comfort, but can not rise to the higher level of having made a study of color and arrangement 'for tha furniture already there. There Is no need fur any show of ex- pense. Graceful chairs, pretty table can be had even In wicker work, and 1hew are Infinitely more nrlls'le tha.i the leather couches that look ns If pre pared for a funeral bier, or Hi" iidcr ous settee, upholsli rd In marvelous "velours." or than thp gilt or maliog. any "suite," with Its five piece, all alike bld'-ous lu shape and material. Bare floor covered with Persian rugs of soft colors settle the enrpet qtieMlon much better than any other slyle of adornment, and when the purse Is too slender for the real eastern rug a dozen substitute cnu be used which almost iiiiisntr the pin pone. The best of these Is found among the reversible English art squares. They make no attempt to copy Persian carpets, but have a style of their own. No room is complete without pictures, and In these days reproductions from the world's masterpieces are within thei reach of all. If well selected "black and whites" are framed, quietly and plain ly, the home decoration Is far more successful than bad oil paintings la gorgeous gilt frames could make It. Draperies should haug In long, un broken folds and not be tortured Into stiff curves by bands and cords; espe cially Is this true of the lace curtains which haug against the window panes. It Is the fashion of the hour to loop them Into all sorts of shapes, but the trained taste demands that they should hang straight and be like a richly wrought film between the outside and the Inside world. China, glass aud all the knick-knacks of decoration are dangerously cheap, and the more showy the article the less likely it is to be beautiful. For the woman who cannot trust herself not to buy to-day what she will wish to get rid of next week there Is one advice: "Do not buy anything of this sort tili you have thought over It for a year." ToukIi Customers. The most important rule to be ob served by the man who hunts wild hogs in Southern Colorado Is to be near a tree, otherwise his first bunt may be his last. A Northern man who went after these Southwestern hogs was Inclined to laugh at the warnings of his Yuma Indian guides, but his ex perience, as reported In the Washing ton Post, proves that the animals fair ly ache to give the hunter all the sport he wants. When the hunters came upon a drove, Tlte, one of the Yuma guides, told the sportsman to get bis rlflo ready and take his stand near a thick spreading tree with some low-hanging limbs, lie and Paul, the second In dian, stepped off to the sides, each standing beside a sapling. Then they sent the dogs Into the underbrush and awaited developments. Presently the dogs broke out of the nnderbruslPand made away, as if they had Important business at the othec end of the county. Closely behind tbd dogs came n big boar, foam dripping from his great tusks, and covered with the blood of a slaughtered dog. Tito fired, hitting him squarely In the head! but the boar only grunted with rage and wheeled. The guide dropped his gun and swung up his sapling without delay. The boar came on full tilt, and struck the little tree fair with his forehead. The blow nearly shook the guide off After two or three attempts to but! down the tree, the boar began wort about three feet from Its foot, digging up the ground until he struck a root; then biting It with his razor-like teetbi The hunter then thought It time to take a band. With his rifle over hl shoulder he scrambled up Into his tree, and getting a good sight at the boar, he fired, but did not bring the animal down. It took seven shots to do that After the big boar had been disposed of, Tlte and the hunter thought of Paul. lie was concealed by Interven ing underbrush, but they could bear his rifle popping. Then the rifle-shots suddenly stopped, and they heard only snarls and grunts. When they got where they had a clear view they saw an exciting spectacle. All the drove except the big boar had broken through the brush near where Paul was standing. He promptly "shinned" his sapling, and there ho was beselged, some of the hogs butting the tree, others vigorously undermin ing it. He had made good use of bis rifle, but he had started out with only half a dozen cartridges, and there wero more hogs than cartridges. If he had been alone he certainly would h.avd lost his life, for the bogs would either have brought down the tree or waited till hunger and exhaustion had forced him to loose Ills grip. Once out of tha tree, he would have been lorn to pieces In a twinkling. Tiie an. I the sportsman climbed two trees where they had a clear range, and opem-d tire. They had plenty of ammunition anil, of course, there could be but one If- ue. But not one of tha hogs-there were nineteen --ran away) Every one was kiiieil while raging nn( foaming and li-.-lit uc; at the foot olj one of the tree in which the men were perched. V. Io n I hey lin.keil ovel) fholr can rid.ro belts tl.ey found It hail taken llfty biiUein t i i.'i.-pose of tin! drove. Yet all thfie men wero ac counted good shots. Killing n" l!ie ..iiio C.inls. The A' dub II ,' ciety of Mhsotir, calls nit'iiiio'i anew to the fact that culil sto nm- is In -tcpiiig the extiim nation of wild miim: Is. d ngiess lm passed a law icgu ailng the tralllc iiik h!j pin- urn lit of birds mid game, Lot tlei n use heizur. s by g ,vi riitn "it olll- limn cers show that tile statute Is extensive" ly violate 1. It Is now he'd by persons who have g'veti spicial attention to the subject that the only s'lltlcicnl remedy Is M prohibit lb1 Nile if it 1 1 game. It bin b -on iiseirlalmd b,. Fie Audubon Sc clety of MVourJ tha, nllUu the j-at flf c"ii years vomr end In'n ctlvi-r u i birds In Mi-H -i h ue (I cm h eil ;' pi r e ni a d -; in b - s i-v . 0 1 1 r ci nt. L-t-il y a -I-' s z .f lu Nsv York Included .'.''.'( i raiuc birds t'li! jn.Wi s in if l-'rd. J Cilnr i :!.' ' jfBine bln! w tv . i w. il and n wli ib- car loan of if'i:'ll wa i c.spi iri-d lu Indian Territory. Gn'to- uuJ .-itr; birds nr. golin; fist a d tin- pn p ni Ion Id sti p their sal-1 entire' j.Mim upj orlers fa-1. Kt. Lou's (i'obe-1 ; m . int. A man carrying a little valise, or a woman tarrying a big one, Is always funny sight od the street. London Now Has Many Gorgeous Hotels The impending erection In Picadllly of two immense hotels one on the sits of St James' Hall and adjoining prop erty and the other on the site of the present Walsingham and Bath hotels emphasizes the fact that the west end Is becoming the chief area for hofel life In London. A. few ago .tb9.Strsn.da.nd Trafalgar Square could claim pre-em-Inence as the center of the most cele brated hotels the Savoy, the Cecil, th Metropole, Morley's, the Golden Cross, etc. but quite recently a new and im proved style of "hotel de luxe" ban come Into existence, and within a brief space of time It seems probable that the west end will be "hotelized" od a scale, both of magnitude and luxurious refinement, surpassing the airiest dreams of the hotel manager of fifteen years ago. While the wonderful Itltz Hotel, to reach from Arlington street to the Green Park, promises to be the most 'splendid In London, Clarldge's. Just ol'l Klrosvenor Square, has already intro (bleed the modern hotel life into tha very heart of .Mayfair. Very startling Is the contrast now non-existent -be. jtween the richness of Clarldge's aii'l the plainness, almost amounting to poverty, of the old Bath Hotel, stripped of the homely old mahogany furniture which may have been there since Join Adams, the first American ambassador, put up at tbe hotel. For nearly l.'O years the old Bath Hotel has been looked upon by genera tions of Londoners as one of the mys teries which only the aristocratic might penetrate. There is something forbid, ding in the words, painted on tbe Pic cadilly side of the house. "Baih II del -for Families and Gentlemen," and mil lions of people must have looked upon the plain, dowdy old corner building, with Its coat of dirty paint, and have fancied the interior to be, by contrast, a marvel of comfort. But now, being doomed to destruc tion, the old place has beeu subjected dally to Inspection by brokers, and the auctioneer base sold lis contents. And the famous Bath Hotel stands revealed as a wretched jumble of passages and rooms devoid of attraction and fit only Jfor the housebreaker. Its floors have reached the 'switchback" stage. There are unsuspected little steps, some up and some down, Into many of the rooms. The old portable baths In a Piccadilly Hotel! emphasizes the change which has taken place between the era of the Bath and the era of Clarldge's and the Carlton. All over the west end, says the Lon don Mall, the "hotel de luxe" Is spring lug up. In Sloane street the Cadogan, close by the Hans Crescent in Mount street, the Coburg In Kensington Oore, the De Vere and Royal Palace hotels, all tell the same tale. And the middle aged hotels In Albemarle street nn thereabout are blossoming Into a new and more luxuriant existence. I BUILDS A CHURCH FOR ITALIANS Noble Benefaction of Adrian Iselin, a New York Finnnclcr. ! Adrian Iselin, a New York financier, whose family has spent $7.")0,0O0 build ing Catholic churches and schools lu New Itochelle, haa recently added td the list of benefac tions by closing the contract for the -ree! ion of a church and parish home for Italians of New Roclieile at a cost of $30,000. Mr. Isi 11 ri will also furnish the rectory and sup ply the priest witn vestments and ev- Am-.iA.v isr.'i.i.y. eryfhlng else necessary. Although Mr. Iselin Is a Protestant of Swiss Huguenot ancestry, he and his family have been large ghers to the Catholic Church in this countrv. They gave St. Gabriel's Church and rectory, In New Iloehello, nt a cost of j'J.iii.irni; St. Catherine's Church and rectory, In Pelham Manor; St. Gabri el's Academy, in New Unchelle valued at $Iir,.i(Mi; the old Leland Cas tle, in New Ibichrilp, which Is belli.; used as ri ehool by the Frsuline nuns; St. F.h-niiora's Il'iine for Convalescents, nt Tiickuhoo, and several other church building!. The banker was I 'd to tako mi Interest. Ill the welfare of the church by bis wife, the late Illeanora O'Imn-in-ll Iselin, who was n native of Hal llmore and belonged to one of the o'd (st Catholic families In the t'nited States. On I be Hpanisli Maui. They were speaking of the great pi rate, "lie reminds me of a crusty landlady," whispered the freebooter with side whiskers. "Why so, male?" queried tbe dark man at bis side. "Iteeause he can repel so many boarders." Chicago News. Aini-rli'f.ns IiivmI P,eiim. An American concern, the Pittsburg Plate Glii'-s Company, lias purchased fur f l.ono.iifiii (tie Immense plate glass (lint nt ''nrc!!e-, Pe-lirlum. the lei-g-t -tl!l liilioj.i'. The proM'lil capacity i.f the plant la to lie doubled. IImvc No Kc.lgiun. Mr. lIiuibiirjY the recently returned Arctic explorer, who has been study ing the Ksklmos, inys they have no re ligion not even a belief in a Supreme lielng. Of course it is your duty fo lovo ihoso around yon nil the better for 'heir faults, but do vou? 1 OLD3 I FAVORITES Hory O'More. Young Rory O'More courted Kathleen bawn; lie was bold si the hawk, and she soft as the dawn; lie wishea la-hie heart pretty Kathleen to please, And he thought the best way to do that was to tease. "Now, Rory, be aisy," sweet Kathleen would cry, Reproof on her lip, but a smile in ber eye "With your tricks I don't know, In troth, what I'm about; Faith, you've teased till I've put on my cloak inside out" "Och! jewel!" says Rory, "that same is the way Yon've thrated my heart for this many a day; And 'tis plnsed that I am, and why not, to be sure? For 'tis all for good luck," says bold Rory O'More. "Indeed, then," snys Kathleen, "dou't think of the like, For I hnif gave a promise to soothering Mike; The ground that I walk on he loves, I'll be hound." "Faith!" says Rory, "I'd rather love you than tha ground." "Now, Rory, I'll cry if you don't let me go; Shure I dhrnme every night that I'm hating you so." " "Och!" rnys Rory, "that same I'm de lighted to hear. For dhrames always go by contraries, my dear. So, jewel, keep dhramin' that samo till you die, And bright mornin' will give dirty night the black lie. Au' 'tis plased that I am, and why not to be sure, Since 'tis all for good luck," says bold Rory O'More. "Arrah, Kathleen, my darlint, you've tensed me enough; Sure I've thrashed for your sake, Dinny Grimes nnd Jim Duff; And I've made myself, dhrinkia your health, quite a baste, So I think, after that, I may talk to the praste." Then Rory, the rogue, stole his arm round her neck, So soft and so white, without freckle or speck; And he looked in her eyes, that were beaming with light, And he kissed her sweet lips don't jou think he was right? "Now, Rory, leave off, sir, you'll hug me no more, That's eight times to-day you've kissed me before." "Then here goes another," says he, "to make sure, For there's luck in odd numbers,'' saye Rory O'More. Samuel Lover. Break, Hreak, Break. Break, break, break On thy cold gray stones, O, seal .nd I would that my tongue could utter The thoughts that arise in me. D, well for the fisherman's hoy , That he shouts with his sister at play! 0, well for the sailor lad That he sings in his boat on the hay! And the stately ships go on, To the bavpn under the bill; But O, for the touch of a vanished hand, And the sound of a voice that is still! Break, break, break, At the foot of thy crags, 0, sea! But the tender grace of a day that is dead Will never come back to me. Alfred Tennyson. A POSTMASTER'S LOT. Llks That of a Policeman, It Is Not a Happy One, "A postmaster's lot, like that of a policeman,. Is not always a happy one," remarked a department otlielal to a Star man this morning. "If he isn't being constantly Jacked up by ,1 n.i, ... ... .. I l.n 1.. 1.1.,..,...- LIIU Ul I1C UIICUI, lie JO I'lillll' U iiuu i abused more or le; s by the public, so i he gels It coming to him both ways. "Tbe department is going after fourth class post masters now because they nre so careless In executing pension vouchers, and the first thing foiiio of the first citizens in their communities will know will lie that they have been summarily lin-d out of the ser vice for falling to give heed to the de partment's orders. "The Secretary ,,lf' Interior has reported that the auditor for his de partment is hampered and delayed In the auditing of the accountst of the several I'nlt'sl Statej pension agents through the want of the exercise of proper care ou the purl of the fourth class postmasters in nlilrdng the stamp of their offices to vouchers for pen sions executed before them as author ized by law. "The main points of defects In (he use of a postmarking tlamp on pen sion vouchers lire Indistinctness of Impression and variance of date friin that given lu the Jurat. If the lm presslon mala by U.e postmarking stamp Is not cli.'ii" nml dis.liict, so ns to show Cue date and the name of the pnslofllce anil the Stale, a pen r p; i. Cll must not be used to conip'ete the Impression. 'Postmasters are iiintrnclod to le! their stamps on n f pa rate piece of paper before ma kin-; an Impression upon n pi'iisioii voucher, and to see that tbe stamp will make n clean and clear Impretsion, nod that the date Is I rorrcct. Only one linpresdnn must lie made on the voiieln r nt fhe time of Its execution, "Vouchers returned to postmasters because of Imperfect Impression of the postmarking stamp must lie re tamped, showing tho date of Vie e.i- ecutlon of tbe voucher, lectead of tha date on which tbe second Impression was made. "Postmasters are Informed that con tlnued failure to comply with tbe rej Qulrements of tbe law In this respect may be considered cause for removal, so they had better get a move onj themselves, and act accordingly: Postmasters will find the law set out In section 281 of tbe postal laws and regulations, and tbey bad better study up, or some of them will lose their biUeta."-Washlngton Star. FIREMAN'S ADVICE Don't Jump from Burning; Building Till Heacne It Impossible. Were you ever caught In a fireT Pray that you never may be, but If you ever are one of tl: unfortunates, heed this advice given . the veteran Chief Swlngley, of the il. Louis Fire De partment, who su i that In forty-nine out of every fifty .-uses where persons jump from burni..., buildings and are killed or Injured I hey would be rescued If they waited until the arrival of th-a firemen. ''What persons should d if cut off fiom escape is to shut the door of the room In which they are aud make for the nearest window. The best way is to crawl. There is always a spaca next the floor where the air is good. Smoke always rises. I don't care if a building is filled with dense smoke, a window can be reached by crawll.ig and keeping the head close to the floor. Persons should get on the outside of the window. The room may be filled with fire, but it will take some time before the fire reaches them. Persons should wait until their clothes catch on fire before jumping. It is almost sure death to Jump. "Purning buildings do not full Im mediately. They are generally burn ing at least half an hour before they begin to fall. Even If the 'build ng does begin to fall, the portion where one is may not fall. Of course, when persons are placed In great d.tngrr, minutes seem like hours. The en-, gines get to fires in the majority of cases within a few minutes after the alarm has been given. Another thing that I am reminded of Is the fact of how few persons know the location of Hre alarm Vxea tiearest to fheir resi dences, and how to give an alarm. Ev ery one should familiarize himself with the location of the box and how to turn In an alarm." Washington Star. CONVERSATION AS A FINE ART. Lesion in Talking Should Become Part of Our Education. "Before these days of delighfully written and widely distributed descrip tions of passing events, conversation was regarded as an artistic accom plishment, and valued a great deal more highly than it is at present," Bald a matron in the New York Trib une. "We hear so many curious facts, we see so much more of the world than our coach-traveling ancestors, that the spirit of astonishment is less easily conjured than of old, when tha sciences had destroyed fewer of our Illusions and mankind was less analyt ical. Crispness, conciseness and hu mor are the Indispensable ingredients of the dish offered to the jaded men tal appetites of the old and young of to-day. Lessons In the art of con versation should be considered quite as necessary to a girl whose mind ia expanding in the hothouse of ber lit tle school world as Instruction In the sciences or modern languages. The chief difficulty, apart from the girl her self, would be to llnd a teacher com petent to make the study both profit able and Interesting. But the cause Is well worth a struggle, and the only thing is steady, serious, daily culti vation. Some people are born with a turn for conversation; It comes by na ture to them to make the apt repar tee, the sympathetic phrase, when oc casion calls for It; others have the alrj manners, the speaking glance from liquid eyes, the reserve thawing, con tagious laugh. These are gifts of tin favored lew; but we are all endowed with the faculty of intelligible sp-ich, and It behooves us to regard tbe mak ing the utmost of it not ns a imre frivolity, but ns a duty to our social neighbors." hds unclFsTm slow 7n paying. James M, Wilbur, of New York, Is "il years of a-e, but he expects to live long enough to make the United States pay him SI'i,- ooo for extra work done on the New York postolllce building twenty eight years ago. The building lias out lived Its usefulness mid now is to be replaced by a new At the time Mr. Wilbur was a con tractor In good cir JAM S M. wii.iirit cumstances. N o w he Is poor, partially blind, nnd nflllet. ed with rheumatism. Ho Is trying to make n living selling rubber slumps while wnillng for I'nc'e Satu to pony up. He has no love for ex-President Cleveland, who Vetoed Ids little bill a Tier II iiad been passed by Congress The old man's account has been fav orably reported by tho House eight limes nnd three hues (lie Senate has. passed It. but tie fed tape of govern ment procedure ,oved n bar every time Mr. Wilbur got ready to sign hh ns-elpt. A too zealous desire to hear both !des of the story Is really a weakness for gossip, livery wife lins the Inward hope that her husband's next wife will be ineau to bltu. l"- ' ! A queer title, ' The Transit of tbi Red Dragon," has been bestowed bj (Eden Phillpotts upon his new novel.-1 Rider Haggard's new novel, "Thei Pearl Maiden," Is coming from thi hands of the printers. It is a storjj of the fall of Jerusalem. "The American Advance: A Study, In Territorial Expansion," by Bdmnn4 J. Carpenter, will be published at aa early date by John Lane. . j Capt. Richmond Pearson Hobsoni the hero of the -Merriniac, wlJl write a novel and devote all his thae t4 lecturing and literary work. Charles Iteade'once gave a ceeip for writing novels to a young noveli 1st now well knewn. It ran thusi "Make 'em laugh; make 'em cryj make 'em wait," In Heath's modern language series' lias just been Issued "Corneille's On- ia," edited with introduction and notei iy Johu E. M.atzke of tbe Leland Stanford, Jr., University. ' The Vineyard" is the title of a new novel upon which Mrs. Cralgie Is en gaged. It is a story of life In a mod ern town and It contains no meta'' physics. The author is still in India, The big "Dictionary of Slang" upon which Messrs. Henley and Farmei have long been engaged Is almost dnished. Mr. Palmer, It may be notcdi was the editor of five volumes ot "Merry Songs and Ballads." Elsworth Lawson Is the name ol the author of a novel with an an usual title, "From the Unvarying Star." to be published by the Mac tnlllan Company. The scene is laid ;.u Yorkshire, the author's English; home. The story is not a tragedy though it has all the elements of a tragedy in the opening. The ScVibners announce the early publication of a book of nature stodjl it great practical importance em titled "Our Northern Shrubs' and How lo Identify Them," It is by Harriet L. Keeler, aud, with its 100 photo graphic plates and thirty-five pen and j k drawings, constitutes a worthy and helpful companion volume to he popular "Our Native Trees." "When Patty Went to College," by can Webster, a recent recruit to tha ranks of story writers, will appear with the imprint of the Century Com jiany. This story is said, to deal with the lighter phase of life at a girl's college. Its chapters each repre rent episodes in the life of the heroine, fdiss Patty, who delights to get iato fccrapes, with a weakness for playing practical jokes. OLDCLO'a IN DUBLIN TOWN. So Lack of Grand Continues for Those V. ho Have Mo "Dirty Pride." It is not a little amusing to read jmong the advertisements of cast-off .-iotiies lu the columns of court dresses for sale or hire during the coming Dublin Castle season. There Is no lack ,t variety, and no "dirty pride" in the manner of the advertisements, fo distance: "Castle season Black vel vet suit, complete, second hand;" "Foi l.ale-Diplomatic court suit, second) liass, almost, new;" "velvet levee suit, complete witli hat, sword and shoe buckles, for sale," and so on. One en. lei-pricing London firm has an agent in Dublin for letting out all sorts ol costumes for the castle ball season There is no reason, perhaps, why a rude should not be done In castle cos 1 tunes when there nre people of posh tion who are endowed with frugal minds. But there has been a dark 'rumor in Dublin for a long time thai trains and other forms of femlniuu finery have been leut fjr a considera tion without the intervention of any b dy connected with the "old clo' " fraternity-in other words, that soma iii.-dliigulshei la-lies themselves at time iio n little seasonable trade. This hiring custom Is an old one, and a u advei t iscment published lu n Dub lin paper In LSI I, said to have been read In the House of Commons, ran thu:i: "Dublin Castle Notice Couth iiu-ii "who propose attending the an-; jiroaehing levee nt the castle can bai j r.pplied with a dark blown court i;ress on hire for "s lid per suit eacis liay. Secrecy observed. This beinu the lowest charge made for the hi re of a dark brown suit to the hunibbi class of people for the tee-total anil iepeal procession, fancy balls, etc. I hero can be no deviation from It." 'i'hese were the days, says the London! News, of the Father Mathcw tempers) ai.ee and O'Connill repeal movements! Oct Something Anyway. "Fannie blown drove twenty mlle lo see an old tiialiogany bureau that! belonged to sortie farmer's family." "Did she get It?" "No. She found It was stained plnsj wiili it warped front nnd a broken leg." "So sliH had her ride for nothing." "You nre wr ng. Sin; broke the enr rin;;e. the horse lost a shoe, nnd the I , . t . t fanner charged her 'i for ai (.hiss of milk ii ml the horse feed." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Microti of Ikm klnw. Kllnsato, a Japanese mlcroscoplst. has showed thai the pin-shaped ml- frobe of lockjaw lives In the earth, n order that It may multiply nnd jioison the blood It mit be deep , wound so that air dee net reach lb