fe. W I THE BED CLOUD CI1IEF, FRIDAY, MAY 22. lHSItf. j.' vv- GEN. EITZHUGH LEK. OUR NEW CONSUL-GENERAL TO THE CITY OF HAVANA. lie I Not it St run cor to tho Hronci of I'nrniiRn Now llelng Cimdiil lu Culm Nephtw of the Confederate Ohloftaln. ENERAL FITK. htigh Loo.tho newly appointed COtlHUl general to Cuba. Ik not unfamiliar with the scones of war that await him at his post. He lias Keen Home service. Ho Ih a nephew of General Robert E. I.wj ami served tin Scr (he great confederate leader dining the war of the rebellion. He wan horn In 18.15 nt Clermont, Fairfax County, Virginia, and was graduated from the military academy In ISM. Coinmls tlonod ns lieutenant lu the Second civ ilry he went to the frontier, wassevoic y wounded by the IndlanH and was 10 ?nlled to ho ItiHtructor of cavalry at IVost Point. When the war came Lieu enunt lw resigned IiIh commission and lolncd the confederate cause. At first he did Htarf duty anil waH adjutant gon nal of Ewoll's brigade. In September, I8C1, he was made lieutenant colonel )f the First Virginia cavalry and coon lfterwaid was promoted to he colonel. He served lu nil the campaigns of the limy or northern Virginia. In ISGl! Lie was made a brigadier general and t major general lu ISM.. At Wlnehes er, In 18fil, he wan disabled by n severe A'ound, which kept him from duty for icverul months, lu lSii.'i he was placed n command of the whole cavalry corps Df the army of northern Virginia, and i month later surrendeied to (lenoral Meade nt Farmvllle and letlred to his Virginia home. In 1SS.. he was elected Rovemor of Virginia. General l.co goes to Cuba with absolute liberty to travel about wherever he pleases un obstructed and unrestricted by the Spaniards. Should the President de sire uny information concerning the state of affairs In Cuba the new con mil general will he in a splendid pusl llon to Rather It. It Is known that (Jen- grs. FiTznron lei:. rnl Lee, while being n fair man, warm ly sympathises with the insurgents. Water of (inlil mill Silver. Tho tlnie-honoird custom of shower ing rlco upon tho depaitiug bride, and gioom has its painful side. Many young couples have begun their honeymoon in actual physical pain, thanks to the stony grains which have stung their eyes ami ears and found their way into their clothes and down their necks. Worse disasters than this aro on rec ord. Horses have taken fright at tho reckless showeilug of these grains and this, In some cases, has led to the over turning of the carriage and severe In jury of Its occupants. Attempts have occasionally been made to mend this state of affairs hut until lately nothing has taken the place of rice. The piob 1cm Is at last solved, however. At u recent double wedding confetti was used as a substitute for the offending rice. For the benefit of such readers as uic unacquainted with confetti I may describe them as tiny paper wafers, principally gold and silver, with u few coloicd ones Intermixed by way of ad ding t" the effect. The pi ogress of each brldo down the staircase to the cai rlago on this particular occasion was made in a shower of gold and silver- surely quite as good an omen for her future prosperity as could possibly lie afforded by tho prosaic grains of rice. Tho effect of the myriads of sparkling confetti was absolutely charming and fairyllko as they Muttered to the ground, tho sun catching them as they fell. Certainly they clung about the dresses of tho newly married couples, but they did no harm and were joon shaken off. In tho house, as they fell on tho lloral decorations and sparkled among the roses and ferns, they pro duced a result that Is well worthy of notu. by thoso whoso business It Is to provldo novelties for functions of this sort.' Ah for tho horses, they were sub limoly unconscious of the tiny gold and silver pieces with which their backs lind been sprinkled by tho time they started. Wnverly. Now lie I.earnevl tho Neirn. Senator Stephen IJ. Elklns of West ! Virginia tells an Interesting story of bis ' election to his present seat. "I was sit- ' ting In my study nt my country home," said he, "nwnitlng tho returns that should tell mo whether or not I had been chosen to take tho place of Senator i Camden. Tho operator nt the tolegraph station had orders to open ull telegrams nddressed to mo and to telephono their contents to mo Immediately. Suddenly tho telophono boll rnng nnd the chil dren's governess, who answered tho 'phono, camo to mo und told mo that the person at tho other end of the wire was saying something about 'shoes,' Bho nnbin't nulto make Jt put. 'Oh!' said I, 'It's my wife's shoemaker, probably. Tell Iif in to let the mntter test until to morrow.' Sue delivered the message, but returned shortly to hay that the man Insisted on talking to me. I went to the telephone. It was the telegraph operator and the message ho wus trying to transmit to me was: 'When ulinll I send you my Bhocs? Johnson It. Cam den.' Then I knew that I had been chosen to fill the Hhnfs of that worthy gentlemen." Exchange. liilirn I" I'rin lilrn t. The pictures pi luted lu southern newspapers of the new homo of Sain Jones, the evangelist, at Cartersvlllc. Georgia, show that It merits tho term palatial, which is applied to It. Archi tect and builder weiu apparently giv en carte blanche, and the Interior dec orations yud furnishings were supplied regardless of expense. The revivalist Is now "well fixed" with the treasures that moth and rust are supposed to corrupt. There are line hordes In his stnbles. thoroughbred dogs in his ken nels and other comforts of wealth. Mrs 1Q SAM JONES. Jones takes special pride In a collec tion of souvenir spoons said to havo cost five hundred dollars. I.liiilil 1'iKil f"r llrlliiln'ii Fleet. The British admiralty has taken an Important step in directing that tho new fleet cruiser Gladiator, building at Poitsmouth, be fitted for the consump tion of liquid fuel. Success has attend ed the experimental use of various forms of liquid fuel In several navies, notably In the Italian, Russian and German services. Tho Itallnns have put Into all their new ships petroleum burners on a system Invented by nn Italian engineer named Cunibertl, whose system has ulr-o been ndopted by the German government with satisfac tory results, the fuel used being not crude petroleum, but petroleum residu um, the use of which. In connection with Cunlbertl's burners, Is said to be most economical, while It can bo burnt without producing smoke, an obvious advantage from a naval point of view. It Is curious that the use of liquid fuel has come so s lowly to the front, consid ering that experiments with CuniberU'ts apparatus were carried out nt Spezzlu in 189:!, and that M. Weyl, tho well known French naval expert and edi tor of Le Yacht, was enthusiastic In Its favor four years ago. It Is anticipated that before long the use of some form of petroleum fuel will be general throughout the navy, as It has the en ormous advantage of Increasing the ra dius of action of a war vessel by some GO or 70 per cent, and further, will probably go some way towards solving the dllllcult problem of replenishing tuel supplies at sea. Tho Ottoman Kniolre. The Daitmouth debaters have chosen the first question submitted by Wil liams for the first annual debate, which will he held In Mu. The question reads as follows; "Resolved, That the gen rial welfare demands he suppression of the Ottoman empire by the European powers." Dartmouth chose tho nega tive. Spcik ell of III. Two distinguished visitors from England, John Oliver Hubhes and Har ry Fiirnlss, have taken occasion to pay their respects to us since their return, and it Is profitable to compare the ob jects of Interest they found here. Mrs. Cralgle, who has succumbed to a Hrit Ish Interviewer, was Impressed by the fact that we aro n deeply ldlgious pco JOHN OLIVER HORDES. (Mrs. Cralglo.) pie, Independent, frank and not given to Itilo or malicious gossip,' Amcrlcnn women seemed to her very witty nnd exceptionally well drcsjcd. Mr. Fur nlss considered his own Impressions worthy of a lectin e, in the courso ot which ho commented on tho pertinacity ! of reporters, the large appetites ot Chi cago girls, and the superabundance of chiropodists In New York, lie, too, like Mrs. Cralgle, was struck by tho prevailing enurtcousness of manner of Americans toward each other, An oath on thn lip shows that the devil is in tho heart. .Mrv Ai I I BABY AS A SHIELD. A KENTUCKIAN USES A SIX-MONTHS-OLD INFANT. ThrcntcinMl hy III llnnnlrs lie flouijtit thn Mint Cmtnrilljr Weapon of Do- feimr liter llrarcl of A Typical Mountain 'I rial. TYPICAL trial In the mountainous regions of Ken tucky has just been concluded at Hay den, In Leslie coun ty. A boy named Abe Pace killed his uncle, and he and his father wero In dicted, Pace fled to the mount a. I n s, where his father and all his relatives lived. After some difficulty, both Abe and his father were captured. The trial of tho boy began week he fore last, nnil all the mountain people descended Into Hnyden, nrmed to the teeth, to Intimidate witnesses und get the boy clear. Judge Floyd Hall, who Is a very brave man, Issued an order that none but witnesses should be ad mitted to the court room, and that the sheriff should search them nt the door and check till weapons. So tho trial progressed poacenbly enough. The sheriff sat behind a huge pile of weapons nt the door und the witnesses glowered helplessly at one another. The boy was convicted and was sentenced to Imprisonment for life. As It was feared that the further con tinuance of the strain would result in bloodshed, the muttering of the friends and enemies of the Paces growing louder every day, the trial of the elder Pace was postponed and he was released on $4,000 bond. Pace had to get back to his house in the mountains. The family and friends of the man his son murdered bad sworn to take his life. So all the way home he would piactlcully have to run the gauntlet. To protect himself he took with him a six months' old baby. His plan was to carry the child and, If he MA &? W "v -' 1 1 WT ',7' -' rAsf' SHIELDED BY AN INNFANT'S INNOCENCE. was attacked, to hold It In front of him. He knew that his enemies would not kill the baby, even to kill him. This was the only thing that saved his llf. The baby proved to he a complete pro tection. Once back in his mountain fastnesses he was safe. Hut, of course, the end is not yet. They have long memnrk'B for hating in the mountains of Kentucky. UIG POKER GAME. The limit Stake "l.iirk" llalilnln linked In With 1 our Aeon. "The biggest game of poker 1 have nenrd of in the past few years," said a California!!, "was played in San Francisco about two years ago between 'Lucky' Baldwin and a California cat tleman. The game was limited, but one by one the players dropped out, until nobody was left In but Baldwin and the cattleman. They agieed to waive the limit, and the cattleman set the pace. He wanted to bet S1O.U00. Bald win staid ami offered to go him $10,000 better. The cattle owner scratched his head, and said he didn't have that much to lose, but he would like to put ii)) his cattle as collateral. Baldwin was agreeable, nnd tho cattle were as sessed nt 10 a head. Thou tho cattle man raised Baldwin $10,000. That made Baldwin scratch his head and hem and haw a little. Ho said he was In tho same predicament as his friend. He didn't have quite that much to lose. " ' But,' said Baldwin, 'you know my house on Market street,' giving the number of the property; 'well, I'll put thnt against "00 of your cattle, mak ing a total of tTa.OOO.' "The cattleman ngired, and then It camo to a show-down. The rurnllst laid down four queens. Baldwin laid down four nces. It was the stlffest game of poker pbyed on the Pacific coast for many long years." Klnc I'.xlln All Interesting book could bo written telling the story of tho African Kings, or rather great chiefs In exile. There is an Arnbl lu Ceylon, nnd Zobelr, who was sent to Gibraltar. Thfiii there is Ja-Jn, whom tho English dispatched to tho West Indies (with a badly selocted lot of wives, as ho complained pathetic ally), anil Behanzln of Dahomoy, who was lately Indebted to tho French for n passage to Martinique. The English, too, havo Zulu chiefs Interned at St. Helena Gungunhana nnd Prempnh whoso future placo of resldenco is still to ba decided, i Lord Blythswood snys that he has an Instrument capable ot muuGurlng 'down to tho sixty thousandth part of .an inch. A MAINE "LEATHER STOCKING." He .Shot Throe llrer In Very Short Order. On the level lowlands of the Molun kus, a short distance below Sherman Mills, Aroostook county, on u farm as level and as smooth as any western prairie, resides Mr. Joseph T. I.eavltt, a gentleman upward of GO years of age, well and favorably known In that sec tion ami also In western Penobscot and East Somerset, where he formerly re sided, says the Lewlston (Me.) Jour nal. He Is not a hunter bv tiade or profession, his two principal occupa tions through life having been farming and blacksmlthlng, still he has n skill at hunting, trapping and fishing that few can equal. Several years ago Mr. Lravltt left his house with his repeating rifle in pursuit of deer. A light snow had re cently fallen and ho soon struck the fresh trail of deer Hint he knew must be near him. Being on the windward side of the deer and fearing that they would scent him nnd lite, he made a wide circuit around the place where he Judged them to be, moving with all the stealth, deliberation and caution that was In olden times said to characterize the movements of an expert scout trail ing an Indian warrior or vice versa. On reaching the leeward side be moved forwaid a few paces as nolse lesly as Cooper's Indian Chlngachgook and caught sight of n deer Just as the animal was lying down. In lying down the deer became hidden from view by an Intervening log. The hunter's reso lution was Immediately taken. He coeknl his rllle and threw It forward for Instant use; then he calmly reached out one hand and snapped a small twig. Tho noise was slight but suffi cient. The deer sprung to Its feet and was shot on the Instant. The report of the rllle brought an other deer to Its feet nnd the second deer was as promptly dispatched. Near the second doer a third deer was now seen running, but was speedily over taken by the third bullet from Mr. Leavltt's repeater. Looking about to see If there were any more worlds to conquer nnd llndluc none at hand and then suddenly remembering that the law as It then was only nuthoilzed him to kill three deer, Mr. Leavltt, like a law-abiding citizen as he Is, promptly ceased hunting and set about dressing the three deer, shot single-handed and alone. In whnt was probably the quick est time on record in this country. tin Wni Happy. "She is mine," murmured Algernon Roseleaf Vincent. "She Is mine." A balmy zephyr softly sighed outside the sparkling lights shone brilliantly o'erhcad that was what they . wero there for. The whole world seemed saturated with pure Joy. Ho drew her closer to him and his eyes gazed lovingly on hers. "My queen!" He did not speak nloud but he was filled with such ecstatic bliss that the spheres in their courses seemed to sing: "My queen!" But Algernon nh, sordid soul! loved her not for her looks alone. For, though she was Indeed a welcome sight tho thought that she would bring him wealth caused In him this rejoicing. She would capture the pot, contain ing $1.37 and two beer checks. Ho nlready had two queens nnd n pair of aces and she filled his hand. Detroit Free Press. Sltut On hy Hehoolhoinieii Mnnly. Superintendent Linden, at tho in stance of Director Rlter, called tho at tention of the pollco lieutenants and sergeants to the ordinance of Nov. 11 last, regulating the speed of trolley cars In passing snhoolhouses, ninl.lng It un lawful for any passenger railway com pany operating In the city to run any car propelled by electricity between the hourB of S r.. r.. and 5 p. in. at a grent cr rate of speed than six miles an hour over a distance of 150 feet on either side and In front of any public school. Tho ordlnnncc also provides that it shall be tho duty of tho bureau of po llco to Instruct patrolmen on duty whero public schools aro to time tho speed cf tho earn at least once a 'day so as to become familiar with the rate of speed und to report tho same to their superior officers. Tho penalty for a vio lation of tho ordinance Is a lino of $20. Philadelphia Ledger. Municipal Government. Every city wants good streets nnd good sewerage and suitable school buildings and public works ot various kinds. Tho affairs to bo attended to in a city are not political, but financial. A city is like a great business firm. Poll, tics ought not to have anything to do with city elections. Tho very best men to maniiKo imnortnnt public enterprises I ought to be chosen to olllce. Rev. Cyrus Richardson. ODD BRIDAL TRIPS. THERE SEEMS TO BE NO TO ORIGINALITY. LIMIT IVcililcil br I-onc-llMancr Telephone Ono t'oiipln Mr.iin I ho Sound An HliRlnerr Took HI llrliln Awn) III n t.ntomotWc. V N THE HONEY inoon, as In every thing else, the times have greatly changed, says the New York Record er. Two young per sons who hip to be married this month have planned to spend, their honey They expect to stay and tlii bridegroom. moon In Siberia, nt least a year, who Is something of a writer, eon templates gathering materials for a book upon the social and political con ditions of the country before they re turn. Another couple will Journey slowly around the world, spending a season at Nice, a winter in Egypt, a summer among the Norway fiords, several months in the orient and Australasia and a leisurely return homewaid acrojw our own continent. Last spring one happy pair took a trip through Alaska and returned home with Innumerable KJiivenlrs and native trinkets. Another bride and groom spent six months upon a yacht ciulslng about the Pacific ocean, and still another pair took their Introductory journey into the realms of matrimony by means of a carriage drive throughout their native state. An athletic nevrly-wedded couple of New Haven, Conn., aro reported as having "hiked" it through three states, and one notoriety-seeking pair even rode to church and back on their wheels instead of using the conventional coach nnd white horses. Many men and women Iwivo been united In the bonds of matrimony while at a considerable altitude from the ground In balloons, but it remained for two natives of the Wolveilne state to plan a honeymoon In one of these hips of the air. Owing, however, to I the extreme nervousness of the bride. I nn early descent was made and the i distance actually traversed was but trilling. Wo.vn In Alabama, quite near the city, where the songster "drej'int he saw n pretty yaller gal," an Impecuni ous pair decided on a novel wedding trip. They traversed a considerable distance, the groom trundling nn old wheelbarrow, which contained their luggage, and, upon occasion, even the bride herself. Another enterprising couple of our own city, who, for purposes of econo my, combined with honeymonlcnl bliss, engaged, respectively, as steward and stewardess on a West Indian passenger steamer, enjoyed their tilp so much that they havo retained their positions Indefinitely. Along our northern frontier and across the line In Canada, honeymoon trips on skates, snow-shoes and In sleighs, Ice-boats and toboggans have becomo of common occurrence, and numorous collides have occupied n hunter's log cabin In the backwoods during the joyous season. It Is Interesting to note that a couple swam the whole distance of Long Is land Sound as their wedding journey. When, however, It Is further explained they were accompanied by a naphtha Inunch and were both piofesslonal swimmers, tho mystery It. not so mys tcrlouB. Another expcrlenco that might al most seem to rival the foregoing In originality was the case of the Balti more & Ohio engineer who received ardors to take his locomotive out with in a few minutes after the cei emony was performed, and, with the aid of his fireman, smuggled his brldo Into tho cab and took her to tho end of his tun. But probably tho most strikingly original form of the wedding journey that has ever been accomplished was the one that too!: place last fall, the happy pair being married by tele phono. The reasons for Ibis wero al most wholly of an economical nature, tho bride's dwelling placo being in a New England city, while the groom was engaged In business at Los Angeles, Cal. After the ceremony the twain made their respective way to tho nearest railway station, whero they took train nnd met, as pre-arranged, at Council Bluffs, Iowa, tho groom accompanying his brldo thence- back to the home he had prepared for her. One admirable feature of the present fashion of long-distance hone moons Is tho diversity nfforded In choosing suitable gifts. Thus tho couple bound to tho tropics, the mountains ol India or the Aztec ruins of Mexico appreci ate such articles as a camera, a pair of lleldglasses, an alpenstock or half a hundred other similar articles ot real uso or necessity, nnd tho almost Incvl tnblo dupUcato butter dlshoi nnd ollvo tongs aro avoided. It Is true that an overplus of photographic or optical ap paratus might thus result, but then these articles are always more or less desirable even In quantities, nnd no criticism Is engendered oy their absence from a prominent position on the buffet or dining table. Somo fow years ago, when the happy pair were accustomed to rumble awny in their coach to tnko train or boat for a few weeks' jaunt to somo near-by re sort, tho minds of tho wedding gucsti wero filled with naught but pleasure and anticipation of the joys in store for l the departing newly wedded. 4 n ST But when wo begin o throw pliocs and rice after couples who have their faces turned toward such romantic parts of the world as Siberia, ct al., it becomes a much more serious matter, nnd many a heartfelt prayer for tho voyagers' safe return accompanies tho effusive congratulations over the happy event. A MALAY GIRL'S LIFE. i:n;:isel to I!p Married When Hho I One Year Old. At evening, when the tierce sun vent down behind tho gr'on banian tree that nearly hid Mount Pulol, the khnlecb would sound the call to prayer on a hollow 'log that hung up befoio tho palm-thatched mosque, rays the Over land Monthly. Th'en Busuk and her pliiymatis would fall on their faces, while the holy man sung in a soft, mo notonous voice the promises of the kornn, the men of the campong answer ing. "Allah II Allah," be would sing, and "Mohammed Is his prophet." they would answer. Eery night ISustil; would lie down on n mat on the floor of the house with a little wooden pillow under her neck nnd when she dared she would peep down thronpii the open spsicof in the bamboo floor Into the darkness benenth. Once she board a low growl and a great dark form stood rir.'.it below her. She could see lia tall hahlng Itr slde-s with shoit, v.hljMlkr movements Then all the dogs In tho ennipong began to bail: and tho men rushed down their ladders scream ing "Haiimaii! Haiimau!" (A tiger! A tiger!) The next morning she found thnt her pet dog Fatitmi, named after herself, had been killed by one stroke of tho great beast's paw. Once a monster python swung from a ceiceninut treo through the window of her homo and wound Itself round and round the peist of her mother's loom. It took a dozen men to tie a rope to tho serpent's tail and pull It out. So the days were passed In tho little campong under the gently swnylng cooonnuts and the lithe Malay an girl grew up like her companions, free and wild, with little thought be yond the morrow. That some day sho was to be married she knew, for bIiico her first birthday she bad been en gaged to Muiniit. the son of her father's friend, the punghulo of Bander Buhru. Saeil hy n Drink. A child U years of age hud developed a bad habit of rising in the night to drink from the water bottle, and had been forbidden In vain. On the night of a recent storm his parents being away, his aunt tucked him safely lu bed. "Now, Dickey," she said, "remember I can tell if you go to the water bottle." "Oh, no, auntie," ho smiled slyly, "how can you?" "I can tell," she said with conviction. "But how?" said Dick, skeptically. "I can," she repeated; "and since you won't promise, you nnughty boy, I shall empty the bottle." And she did so, to the) young reprobate's consternation. In the mlillc of tho night the gablo of the house was blown down, and crashed like thunder through the cell ing of master Dick's room. As his aunt and the servants rushed In a terriblo sight met their gnzo. The bed was al most hidden by masses of bricks and masonry, two Iron feet at the head be ing driven completely through tho Moor. With a shriek his aunt fell em her knees. "O, Dicky, poor Dicky!" sho cried. "He's been killed." The words hud hardly left her lips when there came a light, faltering step from the bathroom and as they turned there stood Dicky, his teeth chattering with cold, a candle lu ono hand, and a full water bottle In the other. For a full moment he surveyed the bed with its ton or two of debris, and then shook his head with sorrowful admission. "Yeth, aunty," he declared; "you thed you could tell If I did." Boston Globe. Climbing Down the (.olden Ktulri. "You know what enemies Wilson and Watson were? Well, when Wntson died old Wilson sent a beautiful lloral 'gates njnr' " "I'm glad to hear it. I hate to think a man could not forgive " "Wnlt till I get through. Behind tho gntes wns a stairway- leading down ward." Indianapolis Journal. FLOTSAM AND JETSAM. A largo factory for the manufneturo I1UUIII1U sJkig rhe In of razors by special machinery lsg erected near Berlin. A French society Is being lonnel Paris for tho study an.l Improvement of the vnrlous breeds of iineep dog. Tho Brooklyn llolglus Elovnted Railroad Company has furnished a reading anil recreallon-room for Its employes. ' Within n quarter of nn bcur on Tues day, March 3, Londoners experienced a thunder storm, a gale, snow, ball, rain and sunshine. Tho lato Mrs. Charles Tllcson ot Boston bequeathed to the Bostonlan society a map of Boston harbor In 1799, with the shore and Islauds worked in. silk. During tho coming summer tho school grounds of Cincinnati will bo used as playgrounds for children. It 1b proposed to provldo sand piles Tor the children to roll In, The sea Is Infinitely more productlvo than the land. It Is i.'stlmated that an aero of geiod fishing will yield moro fooil lu a wee',; than an acio of tho best land will yield In a jear. Several English theaters aro now warmed by electric radiators, to tho gie-at delight of their patrons. It 13 said that all draughts havo been dono awny with by this method of heat ing. Tho vital statistics of Steuben, Mo., for tho twelvo months Just closed show a, curious coincidence. During tho year thero wero In tho town, sixteen, births, sixteen deaths, and sixteen mar- rlages. y vi