' l f l i ffi & i, !!; j i ' ; i ft U u u Red Cloud Chief. PUDLISHED WEEKLY. RED CLOXD, NEBRASKA That submarine boat nets very much Hko a SpanlBh cruiser. Edward's crown will havo 3,000 Jow oIb. Half that number of halrB would HUlt him bettor. Argentina will apparently swallow a mifllclent does of that Chile sauce to bco what It tnstcis like. Lord Kitchener is sensitive about his namo. A kitchener by any other would smell as sweet to Botha. Minneapolis Times: Tho Filipinos nro a pretty bud lot, but give tho school teacher a llttlo more tlmo. Thero Isn't any doubt that drover Cleveland's gout will dlseourngo Mrould-ho presidents from Browing very Btout. Schley has declined an ofrer to lec ture. Whethor tho verdict wob Just or not, ho will now bo dearer to the American people thnn over. A serum for tetnnus has been dls rovered, It Is said. In romo cases It ought to ho adidlnlstered ulong with tho antitoxin for diphtheria. Commissioner Kockhlll finds that tho United States asked nothing of China except what was clearly in scribed on its laundry ticket. Mr. Kipling Is on his woy to South Africa and Richard Harding Davis Is on his way to South America. South ward tho stars of literature take their way. Tho public Is earnestly longing for tho day to como when tho terrible shrinkage in tho price of copper will strlko a responsive thrill In hard coal. In case any neutral power desires to uso tho Nicaragua canal whllo wo are at war with another power nil thnt it will have to do will bo to apply to us for our consent. Detroit Trlbuno: And any nation which objects to tho kind of neutrality Undo Sam will maintain nlong hts cnnal will bo at liberty to introduce another brnnd If it can. Away down into old Missouri an Oshkosh philosopher chased the pur lolner of his better half. Ho wanted to congratulate him in person. This is glorified common sense. These are prosperous times "down in Maine," tho farmers and truck gar deners of that state being enabled by tho shortage in tho West to command practically their own prices for all products. Tho Spnnlsh newspaper organ in Mexico pronounces tho Roosevelt mes sage to be full of altruism, optimism nnd emhrosls. This will necessitate u rereading by those who want to And tho emhrosls. The Appellate DIvIbIou of the Now York Supremo Court has established tho important fact that there Is a point beyond which speculators cannot go in a conspiracy to reduce tho sell ing price of securities without ren dering themselves llablo to tho peni tentiary. Ex-Congressman Thomas B. Reed, in a spofcch at tho St. Nicholas society's banquet In Now York, asked his hear ers to "honor that handful of .Dutch men who nro holding nt bay tho war 'rlors of tho proudest nation of the modern world." This is the nearest to an expression of opinion on tho Voer war that Mr. Reed has ever Given. When the Salvation Army gets hold of a drifting brother or Bister It calls them by these names, and means It, nd hustles around to got them a Job. ' pinions will differ about the pleasure Vif being drummed Into paradise, but M this big-hearted. Intrepid organisa tion isn't doing n great Bharo ol Christ's work tho world has strangely misread the Master's teachings. Tho condition of affairs In Liberal circles In England Beems to havo Im proved very sensibly Blnco Lord Roso bery's Chesterfield speech: There nre indications now that tho factions may bo brought together under the noblo Lord's leadership on some kind of a platform having to do with the Boer war. Public sentiment In -England, while almost unanimously In favor of prosecuting tho war to the bitter end, Is now supposed to have undergone some change. Multitudes of Englishmen uro eager for a cessa tion of hostilities, and thero Is some possibility In tho opinion of good Judges, that a reorganized Liberal party may be formed around this cen tral Idea. If tho most powerful and enlightened nations nro not willing to trust thorn selves unconditionally to an arbitra tion court wo can hardly expect weal and comparatively uuprogresslvo statet to do so. Jealously and apprehension aro to bo looked for quite as naturallj among tho feeblo nnd Inefficient at among tho strong and resourceful. A 32-year-old hoy, appointed as page in tho Virginia legislature, has re turned homo, declaring that he "wouldn't, keep such company for ?G0 a month," What Is his price ? OFfKERSHOTDOWN Wyoming Shoriff Killed by Out laws. DESPERADOES ROB THE DEAD BODY Freight. Collision m (leorcli-Knnnrtu Farmer Hhont 11 V.'mn ui Kmitut-k- la'n AMii'Rliinlnl llriiUciiuin Mil- of Injur'?. A posse of mounted nnd and rrclt nrincd men left Casper, Wyo., to cap ture or Idll the four outlaws that mur dered Sheriff William Welter of Na troina county, nt (Inrlleld park. The ruimilntf of the dead olllcer aro being taken to his home nt Casper. He was past middle ngo mid one of the old timers, as well as one of the best known cltl. ens In Centrnl Wyoming. Tho names of tho outlaws are: Clar ence Woodward, aged twenty-two; Charles Woodwnrd, aged thirty; F. S. Foote, aged twenty-four; .lelV Frank lin, ngek thirty-four. They were confined In the county jail awaiting trinl for eattlo stealing. With tho assistance of friends on the outside the four men sawed their way out of jail. Once on the outside, they were given horses and made their es cape to tho ranch of the Woodward Bros., nt (iarllold Park sixty-live miles west of Casper, nnd not far from tho notorious llole-in-the-Wall country. Sheriff Welter and two deputies' todk up the trail and reached the Woodward plnce. The outlaws were located in the barn, and as Sheriff Bicker ad vanced and ordered them to surrender they opened fire. The olllcer fell mor tally wounded and for twenty minutes the battle waged fiercely, the two dep uties taking refuge behind some rock. At the end of that time Sheriff Bicker called out that he wns dying and asked to be moved from the. range of the Hy ing bullets. The outlaws refused to grant a truce nnd continued firing every time a deputy showed his head. As the horses of tho otlicers had been s'.unpeded at tho first lire, one deputy was compelled to walk buck to a ranch and see uro a horse, upon which ho went to Casper nnd organized another posse. COLLISION AT SEA One VeMel Mink nnd the Other Dlap irurn lei tlm (llooni. The collision nt sea between the steamship Wnlhi Walla and an un known sailing vessel resorted In the sinking of the steamship and the prob able loss of at least twenty lives. The Walla Walla, owned by the Pacific Const Steamship company, sailed from Snn Francisco .Innuary 1 for Puget Sound ports. She carried thirty-six ilrst-class passengers, twenty-eight Hecond class and a crew of eighty men. When off Cape Mendocino, on tho Cali fornia coast, an iron bark, believed to be French, loomed up in the haze and crashed into tins Walla Walla's bow. Then the sailing vessel slid off into tho darkness nnd was seen no more. All the passengers nnd erew of the Walla, except tho few on watch, weru asleep, but were aroused by the crash. Tho steerage quarters were in the 1tow nnd it is believed thnt some, of tho steerage passengers and erew were crushed to death. A big hole wns made in the steamer's bow nnd she sank in thirty-live minutes. The olli ecrs anil crew maintained strict dis cipline and boats and life rafts were lowered. Advices say thnt the list of dead and missing in thefounderingof the steam er Walla Walla has reached forty-one. Of these vlght are known to have died. The remaining thirty-three are prob ably adrift on the ocean in two life boats and a raft. Unntiln to Survive Shock. Leonard Ferguson, the Elkhorti brakomnn who lost his right leg in an accident nt Arlington died. Ills con dition wns very serious and he became gradually weaked until tho end. The funeral will lc held at the First Chris tian church. Kev. Frauk Emerson Janes will havo charge of the service at the church, nnd the ceremonies at the gravu will be conducted by tho lo cal lodge of the brotherhood of rail way trainmen, of which Ferguson was a member. The deceased carried sev eral thousand dollars Insiuance, which will go to his relatives. Shoots Wnmnto Fittnlly. Near Shawnee. Kas.. a villaire tin miles west of Kansas City,' Carl Fish ncr, u farmer, shot and probably fatal ly wounded Mrs. Mary L. Wallace In the presence of her husband, .1. H. Wallace and their two small children. The Wallaces were traveling overland in a covered wagon from Rich Kill to Cutter county, Nebraska. They had camped near Fishner's farm and lie had ncoused them of stealing corn frjnn his crlbs. The shot that struck Mrs. Wal lace was intended for her husband. Flshucr escaped, but was arrested. Fatal Quarrel, III n quarrel over his child, Leonard Shelgren of Cherokee wnskllled by the blow of a fist delivered by Frank II. Ferguson a. Sioux City, la. Fergu son, who gave himself up to the police, claims lie struck Shelgren in self de fenso. Ferguson enmo to Sioux City from Chicago, Farmer Coniniltn Suicide, Because his long-cherished plan of purchasing another farm fell through John A. Johnson, a wealthy farmer, committed suicide by hanging at Char lton, Iowa. TO EXPEL FOREIGNERS Chlnme Making Preparation for Wnron n Large Hrnlo. Charles F. (irainmon, superintendent of colporteurs for the American Bible society in northern China, writes the society concerning the present sltim tlou In the Chinese empire as follows: "While nt Shanghai I observed that tho ChlucM' government was openly violating I he provisions of the proto col. The great empire would shako off European domination. Thousands of boatloads of small arms nnd ammu nition were passing weekly up the Yang Tse Klnng and the ursennls Were being enlarged nnd worked day and night. C goes of explosives were be ing received and the dowager empress had Issued instructions to recruit the army nnd also to inform her as to the lighting strength of each division and tho time required to concentrate the forces nt u given point. There were nnd nre ninny unpromising features which weighed heavily upon tho minds of those interested. "I must, lwlleve that tho end Is not yet and that within ten years, and possibly within five, a war will ensue the like u which the world has never known. For centuries China has been making repented uttempts to expel the foreigner, each time profiting by past experience, each time with more power and success, each time better equipped and better planned. It Is now pre paring as never before, buying vast quantities of superior weapons, and reorganizing its armies on a correct basis. Therefore, the next attempt will be In force and terrible in execu tion. It will result In a universal up heaval and tin; final dismemberment of this empire at a terrible cost. MORALLY PERVERTED. No Triico uf Mental DIeao Foamt In Ciolnonr. An exhaustive report on tho trial, cxecmtlon, autopsy and mental status of C.olgosz, tho assasln of President McKinley, Is given in the New York Medical Journal. The report embodies the result of much careful Investiga tion by Dr. Carlos MneDouald and Ed ward A. Spitzkn. The question which these investiga tors set themselves to answer was: When Czolgos. shot the president did lie know the nature nnd quality of the act ho was doing and that tho act wns wrong? This was from a legal stand point. From the standpoint of medical science the question that framed itself was: Was Czolgosz at the time he committed the net a victim of mental disease or mental unsoundncrsV 1 he reply to these questions, which embodies the entiro history of, the case from the trial of the criminal to his execution and the disposal of his re mains, takes up nearly twelve pages, and, divested of all technicalities, is to the effect that Czolgosz was sane and responsible under the law and punish able for the offense, although every thing in liis history, according to the medical experts, pointed to the exist ence In him of the social disease, an archy, of which lie wns a victim. Dr. MacDonald concludes his report with the declaration thai Czolgosz when he assassinated President McMln ley was in all respects n sane man both legally nnd medically and fully responsible for his net. Mr. Spitzkn, who made the autopsy, concludes his report as follows: "There lias been found absolutely no condition of a ny of the viscera that could have been at the bottom of any mental derangement. Taking all in all, the verdict- must be 'socially dis eased and perverted, but not mentally diseased."' AGREEMENT TO ARBITRATE rrintltltti Attached In n WnRo DUuuto at Xnr York. One of the most original experiments in the settlement of wage disputes be tween capital and labor will be made in Brooklyn by an arbitration com mittee of five men. If either party re fuses to abide by the committee's de cision it will lose $10,000, already put up as a forfeit. Tho firm that is hav ing the dispute with its employes is Wichart & Gardiner, shoe manufactur ers, in east New York. In one de partment seventy men and women aro affected by a newly patented method of malting lasts, ami the employes de mand an increase of 1 cent a pair. This the firm has refused nnd both sides have fallen back on an unique arrange ment. Under the agreement the w.ork lugmeii wero.to name two members of an arbitration committee, the firm ,to name two others, and these four to se lect the fifth. Both sides made heavy deposits, agreeing to forfeit the Biime in event of a failure to submit to tho arbitration. C'olit-lllnoded Aialnatlon. Pleas Hall was shot and nt his homo five miles from Franklin, ICy., whilo sitting around his hearthstone with his wife nnd four children. He 'wns fired upon through a window.' Tho distressed wife and children placed the lifeless body on a bed and remained alone with it throughout the night be ing afraid to venture out to give nu alarm. There. Is no clue to the perp trator of the deed. llolil Up lly M inked Men. Word comes from Hoodlum!, I. T., that tho United States mall coach wan held up by three masked men between Ooodland nnd Florevllle and the mall pouch robbed of Us contents. Postal Inspectors have been detailed to hunt ' down the robbers. Killed In Collision. Two negroes nnd an Indlnn were killed iu a collision of an eastbound freight with an extra train between Earlboro and Melt usltey, OklaJ Both engines were wrecked and eight cars demolished. ONE RESCUED ALIVE Accident In a Michigan Mino in Which Many Lives aro Lost. TONS OF ORE EALL UPON THE MEN Hold Work of Hunk Uohlx-rfl nt Knut St. I.oitl Nloili City Jinn Suicides Grand Inlitml linn n Nmnll Ulnae Other Interesting New. The most distressing accident thnt has occurred in this country for years took (place at the. Negaunce, Mich., mine, by which thirteen to seventeen miners are thought to have lost their lives. Tho accident was the result of a cave-In at the bottom of the old shaft and had It occurred half an hour soon crir.O men would have been killed. A survivor tells tho story: "Wo wore sitting around the pump .-it the bottom of tho shaft,, when, without warning, thousands of tons of ore came down. I remembered nothing more until I heard the sound of picks and shovels in tho hands of rescuers and their shouts. I was in total darkness and my feelings cannot bo described. What seemed ages to me were but minutes. When rescuers found me I was sevcnty-flvo feet from tho place where I was sitting, and found myself in a drift. How I got there is a mys tery, but can only bo accounted for by the concussion of the wind." The Negaunce mine Is one of the most unlucky properties in the Lake Superior district. Much trouble hns resulted from sinking nnd drifting from surplus water and quick sand. It was at this mine thnt 81,000,000 was recently expended to sink a shaft to the ledge. TROOPS FROM CUBA. Gradual Withdrawal of Force Now on h Inland. Acting in accordance with a recom mendation made from Uenprai Wood, military governor ot Cuba, Secretary Boot, huSj directed that the Third squadron of the High th cavalry, com prising the entire garrison nt Puerto Principe, be brought to the United States at the first favorablu opportuni ty. It is admitted that, this is practi cally the beginning of the general withdrawal of United States troops iu Cuba, preparatory to the transfer of control of affairs to the civil govern ment to be installed during the coming summer. So far as known there will be no further withdrawals of troops, however, until final arrangements are made for the formal transfer of the government to the newly elected olll clals of Cubn. Fire at Grand Inland. At flrand Island, Nob., Otto Mattke, a clerk, who had been assisting in in voicing, was-on liis way home, and discovered fire coming from the store room of the Crawl Island brewery. He at once turned in an alarm and aroused the neighboring families, including some of the members of the brewing company. The hose company was promptly on hand and at one time had it nearly under control, hut the llnmes seemed to havo made headway into other portions of the plant, the ad joining ice house and part of the brewery plant and before the company could quench the flames and other com panies arrived the ice house was aflame. Tho latter part of the brewery plant and the store house were de stroyed.' The main building was saved tho firemen securing control over tho fhmes before the main building was reached. Crackimuii Get 85,001). Six masked men entered the Nation al Stock Yards bank, north of Fast St. Louis, 111., and after capturing and KKfcVg tho two night watchmen and fireman at the steam plant and blow ing open the vaults with dynamite, so cured S.'i,000 iu coin and currency, with which they decamped. For nine hours from 7 o'clock until 4 a. m.. they were at work on tho vaults without being interfered with. The entire Fast St. Louis police force, aided by St. Louis police, are guarding all the avenues of escape. b,ut aw yet havu obtained no elue of the whereabouts of tho robbers, who, It is believed, escaped on,harse- UUCK, VI Quick Action Prevent it Wreck. Svyanton, Md., was the scene of an attempted holdup on the Haiti more ,fc Ohio. The operator, M. J. Sarsfleltl, says that five men came into his olllcc and offered him candy. Suddenly he wns knocked iuscnslble by them with a padded club. Tho men turned a switch, running the train into n derail ing switch. Thi) quick application of air prevented tho train from being ditched. The armed express officers on the train made such a demonstration that the men fled into tho mountains. Shots were exchanged nnd an armed posse is reported to be in pursuit of the bandits. Illinois KarreMfully Docked. The oflicial test of tho new govern ment dock at Now Orleans was made in tho presence of the board of exam iners. Tho battleship Illinois entered nnd was successfully docked. The Ill inois was drawing twenty-four feet of water when she entered, The battle ship has a displacement of 11, .105 tons. The docks nominal lifting capacity is 15,000 tons, but it can, If necessary, lift 18,000 tons. Tiie tlmo consumed in lifting her was one hour and fifty seven minutes. The contract time is two hours and forty minutes. PRIZE MONEY. Rorotnry Long r.xplnlu Itclntlvc Claim of Knmpsuu nnd Srhley. Secretary Long has written a letter defending the nnvy department ngnlnst what Is declared to be unfriendly criti cism in connection with the distribu tion of prize money and bounty. The secretary declares that the criti cism that the'seeretnry hns discrimin ated In favor of Admiral Sampson and ngnlnst Admiral Schley in the distri bution of yrlze money nnd bounty is unjust, because the department lias no control over the matter, the money be ing distributed from the treasury nnd nil questions of law and fact relative to prize and bounty having been de termined by the courts. Tho secretary calls attention to tho laws covering prize and bounty us they existed In the beginning of the Spanish war. and says that, though advised by the attorney general thnt it might make a distribution, the nnvy depart ment preferred to plnce the mutter In In tho court of claims, and so fnr from displaying favoritism, adopted the most effectlvo means iu its power to secure a just determination by courts of Inw of the rights of all concerned. Touching thcelaim of Admiral Samp son for bounty at Santiago, the secre tary says the distribution was made under a decree of the court of claims, whlcli he cites, and from which no ap peal was taken. Ho further points that under the prize law the commander-in-chief of the fleet is entitled to his "one-twentieth" of bounty by vir tue of liis position us oominander-in-clilef whether lie is personally present during the engagement or not. Says the secretary: "As commnnder-ln-chlef, Admiral Sampson would, therefore, under the law have been entitled to his share of the iKiunty for the destruction of the Spanish ships at Santiago if Be had been on the north shore of Cuba at the time. This was the law, for which the navy department was iu no wise responsible." SECOND TRIAL OF RUSSELL Man One Convicted or Murder Ha An other Clmace. The trial of Charles Russell of Sioux county for the alleged murder of A. L. Stadenmler in June, 1000, was begun at Chadrou January 0, Judge Wcstoveron the bench. Bussell wns tried about fifteen months ago and sentenced to ninety-nine years iu the state peniten tiary, wliieh sentence he lias been serv ing until a short time ago, wheii he was brought to tlilscountyon a change of venue, a new trial having been granted by the supreme court. The crime with which Bussell is charged is one of the most dastardly ever committed in this section of the cattle country. Stadenmier's horse wns found running loose by a neigh-, hor, Bd Basher, and a search being made the man was found lying dead on the range, with fourteen bullet holer, in him. The peculiar mold of the bul lets aud the track of a horso with a broken hoof are things which will figure largely in the evidence. Wrec-k of u Soldier Train. A Bock Island special bearing 300 recruits hound for the Philippines from Columbus barracks, Ohio, was partially wrecked at Chicago. The passengers were merely jolted, although a tourist car, containing fif ty soldiers, lost its rear truck and was dragged half a block before the engine stopped. The ear was badly damaged. A sleeper occupied by eight officers and the wife of one of them was thrown to an adjacent track, but maintained its upright position. After several hours' delay the train was remade and the journey continued. Kill I'iiIko l.ucly t.ovn. Henry Clements, aged nineteen, shot and Instantly killed Mrs. Fdward Davis at her home in Knox, hid. Clements, then turned the weapon upon him self and sent a bullet crashing into his own brain, producing a fatal wound, though Clements still lives. Jealousy Is responsible for the tragedy. Clements aud Mrs. Davis were engaged to be married, but a week ago his sweet heart married Davis. The shooting occurred in the presence of Mrs. Davis' husband and her mother. Clements called her outside tile house and after a short conversation tired the fatal shots'. Accrued of Infanticide. Mary vnd Both Putnam, unmarried daughters of Ebon Putnam, a fnrraer living just across the line in Illinois from Vincenlns, ind., were arrested charged with the mnrder of twin ba bies, born to Mary Putnam December ','1. The babes disappeared Christmas day and the authorities searched the premises and found the little bodies burled iu a pasteboard box In the or chard. Die of Heir-lnlllcted Injiirle. David B. Nutting of Sioux City, la., who cut his throat and stabbed him self and set fire to his bed at the Par ker hotel In Minneapolis, Minn., died at the city hospital. Despondency is supposed to havo been the reason for the act. Alxjut four months ago ho came from Sioux City. He is survived by a daughter of fourteen, who lives with relatives at Woodvllle, N. II. Ild laved to he Train Ittitiuer. (lus Hodges and D. Keppler, two Clif ton, Ariz., otlicers, arrested a man at Morencl who Is believed to bo Harvey Logan, the alleged Montana train rob ber. The prisoner was taken to Solo mouville jail. San Francisco otlicers have been asked to come to Arizona and identify the prisoner. Died of ApopliMy. A. W. Wilkinson of Grand Rapids, Mich., the musical director of a bur lesquh company, died of apoplexy at a hospital In that city. SUNDAY IN OLD VIRGINIA. The Day Mm Observed n 'Strictly as In Nuv? Itacland. Thero Is tin Idea prevalent that the ptrlct observance of the Sabbath was almost wholly confined to tho North. Nothing could be moro erroneous. "Tho Blue Uws" of Connecticut, sur viving ns a proverb for hardness, have Impressed the popular mind nnd fixed an Idea which was, however, not ab solutely accurate. As sevcro as those enactments wore, they wcro scarcely more rigorous, whenever tho observ ance of Sunday wns concerned, than thoso under which the colony of Vir ginia was established and developed. Attendance on divine servico was ns strictly enforced, and abstinence from all secular employment ns rigidly en joined. It was a church-going time. Hcllglon engrossed ino energies of tho people. Participation In worship wns tho law nnd whoever failed in It wn a lawbreaker and wan dealt with ac cordingly. Later on that la, prior to the Revolution there tamo n certain Inxness the reflex of the taut-strung bow when the fox-hunting, cock fighting parson wns Inducted into the livings; but. ns the causes wcro tem porary, the main causo being tho po litical appointment by an absentee Metropolitan, so the effect was not permanent. It was out of these conditions that Hanover presbytery sprang, under the influence of Patrick Henry's model, the eloquent "Parson Dnvles," later tho president of Princeton college. Indeed, while some of tho English parsons who have mnde tho time notorious, woro dicing, and drinking, nnd fighting, tho Inlty were standing staunchly for the old customs, nnd were mnking tho saddling upon them of such miscreants one of the charges in their indictment against tho government "at home." They withstood innovation. They kept the faith. They build churches which still stand to-day as memorials or their piety and churchmnnship. From "An Old Virginia Sunday," by Thomas Nel son Page in Scribner's. Queer Travel of riant. One would not imagine offhand that Ice could possibly be instrumental in accomplishing tho distribution of plants, yet n French scientist hns re cently called attention to the fact that Icebergs are frequently useful in this way. Navigators of polar seas often encounter bergs carrying enormous masses of debris, with more or less soil, in which plants aro growing. Eventually the ice mass runs aground upon tho shoro of some distant land, there depositing tho plants, which may find themselves fo situated as to be cnnbled to reproduce their species. The case of volcanoes as plant dis tributors Is even more remarkable, though one must regard ns very ex ceptional such instances as that noted nt Port Elizabeth. South Africa, In 1887, where largo quantities of vol canic pumice were observed floating on the sea. On these fragments of pumice were found various small ani mals unfamiliar to that part of tho world, and thero was also a sort of cocoanut. The nut wnK planted, and In due timo produced u palm strnngo to the African coast. It was decided that the pumice camo from tho great eruption of Krakatoa, In tho Straits of Sunda, which was in its way the most remarkable volcanic cataclysm of modern times. Philadelphia Evening Post. Antlr of Machinery. "Tho queerest thing about machin sry," said an old railroad man, "is that different machines, all built on exactly the same lines, with every part of tho same size and of tho same material, possess a distinct individuality. Take locomotives, for instance. A railroad will build a batch of engines, say, 20, of a certain class. All of thorn will be of the same dimensions, the same details in every particular, and yet overy one will behave in a different manner. There will be as much difference be tween them as between 20 men. Some will Bteam well, others not. One will be cranky in a certain particular, and a second in still another. Ono will be stiff, rigid; another loose-Jointed. And then, just like members of the human family, somo will be remarkably un lucky, through no fault of their own, while their mates go through llfo with out a scratch." Faihlon In Aihaatl. Tho Ashantls, says an English paper, have become most regular attendants it the English church, and church goers have become quite uced to the tudlcrous spectacle they afford. King Prempeh ls-partlcularly partial to European dress, and appears at church In a frock coat, a tall hat, and patent leather boots. The queen mother, however, still keeps to her na tive costume, which consists of a cloak of a pretty sliado of palo bluo spangled with silver. Tho cloak is worn in much the same way as the Roman toga. The other Ashantls nearly all wear European dress on Sundays, though ionic of them appear in colors, bright fellow crimson and green appearing to lx) their favorite shades. Ktectrlclty to Guide Ship. A now electrical apparatus for the riddance of ships nt sea Is being made it Baltimore A shoal light-ship will o equipped to throw a 13-inch electric jenm skyward, and tho reflection, It is jromlsed, can be seen thirty or forty nllea away. Municipal Kconomy. Jackson, Out., has made, a record for nunlcipal economy. Of tho $2,000 vot- id for decorations for tho reception ot .ho Duke nnd Duchess of Cornwall and fork 300 was not spent. I, -rnPT"