,1 1 " of of " jf 31 [ Inopportune Deaths. tTnlins Caesar was nssassiuated when ho had almost completed the task of consolidating the administration and domiuion of the Roman empire , and his death opened the way to that despotism and corruption which ultimately undid liia work. Henry of Navarre was killed when ho had almost healed the differ ences between Catholic and Protestant , which subsequently rent not only Franco , but Europe , and William the Silnnt also full when ho was on the point of uniting the .Netherlaud prov inces into a compact barrier against the encroachments of Spain. In English history Lord Clivo died at the moment \vhon ho was the one man who could have saved the American colonies and kept the Anglo-Saxon race united , but there is the case of Mira- beau. Ho was literally the one man in Franco who could have averted the horrors rors of the revolution , saved and re formed the monarchy and eo spared En- rope the murderous career of Napoleon and all the devastation it brought. If ho had lived ten or even five years longer , the history not only of France , but of Europe and the world , would have been different. It is in fact suffi cient to say that ho would have made both Robespierre and Napoleon impos sible. Strand Magazine. Pelican , uml Uncle In u Duel. In Kew gardens , in the presence of a considerable number of spectators , an affair of honor was settled between a pelican and a duck. The birds had had words together , so to speak , and the pelican determined that the nest best thing to making the duck eat his words was to eat the duck. So , after a little thrust and parr } ' on the water , he made for the smaller bird and snapped it into his pouch. Then a battle royal began inside the pouch of the pelican. The duck strug gled , kicked , quacked and occasionally managed to get a leg or a wing outside , while his captor throw his beak high in the air , then dipped it into the water , and kept it there , as if trying to suf focate or drown its enemy. From the look of the agitated pouch it seemed as if the contest Aas by no means one sided , but that the pelican was having rather a rough time. At last tlio cluck got his head and one wing out , au l then , with a magnificent effort , managed to get entirely free. Once again on the water , the duck de clined further combat and fled , while the pelican remained , looking as if honor were thoroughly satisfied. London Tel egraph. | ] Levin ; ? Cnp Proprieties. j I have not seou any loving cup passed ! that is true to its name. The loving cup 1 originated as a matter of precaution in i olden times , when apparent friends had i an unpleasant method of killing a friend j who was a rival while he was drinking. So an immense heavy cup was made with a heavy cover. The method of using it can still be witnessed at banquets at the Mansion House in London. The persoa receiving it stauds and turns to his neighbor , who also rises and takes the cover with both hands. The first person then raises the heavy j ; sup to his lips with both hands , and , > having sipped of the contents , holds it while the friend at his side replaces the i' cover and takes the cup , repeating the ! same process iiT turn with his next ! neighbor. Thus , both hands being occupied - : pied , there is no possibility of one friend | stabbing another. In our time the custom has degeuer- ated , and the cover , as a rule , disap- J peared. Nevertheless if both hands were occupied that would not prevent tongues from wagging later , and words are sometimes sharper than swords. Phil adelphia Times. Rlne Stockings. According to an English magazine the i' appellation "bluestockings" originated In the dress of a Benjamin Stilli gfleet , grandson of the bishop , as he used to appear at the parties of Mrs. Montague , in Portmau square. He used to general ly wear blue worsted stockings , and he was a very amiable and entertaining man. Whenever ho was absent from Mrs. Montague's evening parties , as his conversation was very interesting , the company used to say , ' . ' We can do noth ing without the blue stockings. " By de grees the assemblies wore called "blue stocking clubs" and learned people "blue stockings. " Excessive Coffee Drinking1. The Moors are inveterate coffee drink- 3rs , especially the merchants , and they sit in their bazaars and drink continu ously the whole day long. It has been noticed that almost invariably , when these coffee drinkers reach the age of 40 or 45 , their eyesight begins to fail , and by the time they get to be 50 they become - come blind. One is forcibly impressed by the number of blind men seen about the streets of the city of Fez , the capital of Morocco , and this is invariably at tributed to the excessive use of coffea New York Ledger. The Transformed Pythagorean. Some , uudergrad nates once wished to play a practical joke upon a man who was a disciple of Pythagoras , so one day when ho was a little sleepy by reason the amount of brandy and soda that be had imbibed his friends smeared him with honey and rolled him in the in side of a feather bed. When the disciple Pythagoras got up in I i morning , be looked in the looking glass at him self and said slowly , with a whistle , "Bird , by Jovel" London Figaro. 2 T Lived Germans. _ It is interesting to recall the extraor dinary longevity of the three founders the German empire. William I was , Moltko was also 91 and Bismarck was 83 , but indeed all the most illustri ous Germans of the latter half century have been long lived. Ranke was 91 ; Durtius was 72 ; Mom m sen is 81. The poet Geibel was 70 , Wagner was 70 , jiszfc 75 , and the present chancellor is Her Splendid Tlulr. When .Mrs. Norton was in the heyday of her loveliness , a very beautiful Ital ian woman came to London , bringing letters of introduction. Mrs. Norton asked a small party of fashionable people ple to meet her at dinner , among whom was Lord Normanby , a great admirer of pretty women. All the men were en chanted with the beautiful stranger and all the women rather jealous. One of her great beauties was a profusion of splendid hair , dressed in innumerable plaits. The women decided they were not all her own. Before the evening was over Lord Normauby expressed his admiration of the wonderful hair and intimated how much he should like to see it let down. "Since you wish it , my lord , " said the woman , and she forthwith nnplaitcd one massive coil after another , while the other women looked on , devoured with envy. "I am doing for you , my lord , what I do not do for everybody , " said the houri , casting up her fine eyes at the enraptured Lord Normauby from under her mantle of flowing locks. "It is three weeks now since I last un did my hair. " Which announcement in some degree consoled the English dames for their inferior locks. Gllcu lit the Pulpit. The tenets of John Wesley and his disciples were eagerly embraced in Nor folk , and Giles frequently became a Ic- cal preacher. One "local , " Sam by name , is described as "a born teacher , " though his similes often dropped to the ijurlesquo. On one occasion he took for ais text , "The wages of sin is death , " .lucl prefaced his sermon as follows : "My f-ri'uds , Brother Paul tells us ; hat the u.ii'nos o1 sin is death. Now , let's see wuilicr we kin grasp wet he maau by't. b'pose I wor tu go an dn my haarwest for Mr. H. ( a lowil farmer ) , an arter all the wuk wor dun go an ax Mr. T. ( another fa-rmer in the same village - lage ) fur my waages , wet du yeou think Mr. T. would saay ? Sure-ly ho would up and saa'Sam , yeou air a fnle. Go an ax Mr. H. fur yer waages ; yeou ha' dun yer haarwest there. Wet du yeou come an ax mo fur yer waages fur ? ' An ef I wuk all my loife fur the daavil an go tu God fur my reward he wool saay , 'No , no , Sam ; yeon go tu the daavil fur yer reward ; yeou hev wuked fur him in the haarwest o' loife ; ho must pay yeou. ' " Westminster Gazette. A Suilieieiit Diet. A quart of milk , three-quarters of a pound of moderately fat beef sirloin , for instance and five ounces of wheat flour , all contain about the same , amount of nutritive material , but we pay very different prices for them , and they have | different values for nutriment. The i milk comes nearest to being a perfect ; food. It contains all of the different I kinds of nutritive materials that the , body needs. Bread made from the i wheat flour will support life. It con tains all the necessary ingredients for nourishment , but not in the proportions I best adapted for ordinary use. A man ' might ] live on beef alone , but it would , bo 1 a very one sided and imperfect diet , ; but 1 meat and bread together make the essentials i of a healthy diet. Such are j the I results of experience , and the ad i vancing science of later years explains them. I This explanation takes into ac count < not simply quantities of meat j 1 and i bread aud milk and other materials [ , which we eat , but also the nutritive ingredients - j gredients ( or "nutrients" which they i contain. < New York Ledger. [ | Maiden Speeches. ! Sheridan , one of the greatest of Britj j ish orators and who entered parliament . after a conspicuously successful literary career , BO nearly broke down in his ( maiden effort that the general verdict j pronounced upon him was that "nature 1 never intended him for an orator. " ; ! Brougham and Canning were equally j unsuccessful , and many of the most celebrated speakers of the present clay displayed no signs of oratory when they appeared for the first time before the critical assembly at St. Stephen's. Mr. Gladstone's maiden speech , de livered Feb. 21 , 1833 , was a nervous , hesitant and almost inaudible effort. Fire and "Water. Water will extinguish a fire because the water forms a coating over the fuel , which keeps it from the air , and the conversion of water into steam draws off the heat from the burning fuel. A little water makes a fire fiercer , while a largo quantity of water puts it out. The explanation is that water is com posed of oxygen and hydrogen. When therefore the fire can decompose the water into its simple elements , it serves as fuel to the flame. A Unique Sljjii. A sign which was productive of much discussion was read by the patrons of a small laundry establishment in a Mas sachusetts town. It was printed in large letters on a piece of brown paper and pinned to the door of the shop. It ran thus : "Closed on account of sickness till next Monday , or possibly "Wednesday. I am not expected to live. Shall bo un able to deliver goods for at least a week in any case. " Why lie llefnsed to Pay. "One dollar , please , "said the clair voyant. "Not much"ho replied. "I'll not pay you a cent. " "Do you think I reveal the future for nothing ? " "I don't care anything about that. Sou told me I was to marry three times , and I don't propose to put a premium on bad news. " Chicago News. A shrewd old doctor once said : "If I wanted to torture an enemy , I would tell him he had an incurable disease. His life would In miserable , aud ho would bo almost certain to die beforu hie time. " The colder the climate the greater tbo size of the human brain Porpolne Oil. Oils , animal , vegetable and mineral , sro second in importance to but few do mestic articles of commerce. Already medicinally invaluable in the bygone ages of hand labor , lubricants have be come almost a condition of existence in this century of machinery , and of all oils porpoise oil is the finest , the most difficult to obtain , almost the most cost ly. The difficulty , So it incidentally re marked , lies not in expressing the oil from the porpoise , but in catching the porpoise itself. These cetaceans , like the fish they prey on , are most uncertain in their movements , at ouo time playing by the week in our very harbors , at oth ers staying a whole mouth far from the j coast. An economic and reliable method of obtaining regular supply of porpoises poises from our seas would bo worth a fortune. | At present their capture is no more { than accidental. Porpoises are known to i venture into salmon estuaries during spring flood tides , returning to salt wa ter with the ebb , and , as an improve- i meut on the present casual supply sys- j tern , strong rcpo nets might bo cast at I the mouths of these estuaries to inter cept the invaders as they leave. Probably - ' ably , however , the ultimate solution I will be found in the rifle and some par ticular cartridgepreferably fronted with 1 soft , hollow lead to flatten in the crea- j ture's ribs. It may bo that even with a j fatal bullet the difficulty is not ended , I for it has not yet been shown whether , j when fatally hit , the porpoise sinks or floats. London Spectator. WcH.iter Covrcil Ther.i. William Wotmoro Story , the sculptor ' aud poet , was ouo of the few nieu who j presumed to call Lowell "Jim" to the eud , aud Miss Mary E. Phillips , iu her j "Reminiscences of William Wetmoro 'Story ' , " tolls , iu Story's o\vu words to j her , thofollowiug tale of the two youny : meu : "James Lowell and I were very j angry with Webster for staying in old Tyler's cabiuet , aud as ho was to speak in Fauonil hall on the oveuing of the ' UOth of September , 1842 , wo determined : to go in ( from the Harvard Law school ; aud hoot at him aud show him tlmr he had iucurred our displeasure. There j were 8,000 people there , aud wo felt ! sure that they would hoot with us , young as wo were. "But wo reckoned "without our host. 1 Mr. Webster , beautifully dressed , step- 1 pod forward. His great eyes looked. , as I shall always thiuk , straight at me I pulled off my hat ; James pulled olr his. Wo both became as cold as ice ant' , as respectful as ludian coolies. I saw i James turu pale ; he said I was livid j And when the great creature began that ' most beautiful exordium , our scorn turned to deepest admiration , from an abject contempt to belief and approba- tion. " His Hair In IJnnprer. A young artist whose pipe , eyeglasses and luxuriant blond hair have made him well known iu town went to a garden party not so much for social amusemeut as for pencil studies of high life. He were a tall hat , frock coat and lavender trousers and carried a sketch- jiugblocka yard square. At the party his epigrams , paradoxes and fiendish silvery laugh overwhelmed , as he in tended , all the girls iu sight or hearing , but he got through wi tli his social du- ties as speedily as might be , theu weut aud sat down on a distant fence. Soon pencil studies lay all around him on the grass. Suddenly ho felt a gentle tug at his back hair. He thought , "That is some fresh Alec trying to guy me , " and he did not look up. The gen tle tugging ceased , begau again , became much stronger , ami theu he feit some thing wet , soft , slimy , on his neck. With a dreadful oath ho leaped from the fence and looked behind him. Back there was a smart trap , in which sat two girls aud i a youug mau laughing. The horses were i close to the fence , and it was ono of , those that had commenced browsing ou j the artist's profuse locks. Explanations followed and apologies. "All flesh , " the artist said , "is grass , but not all hair. " Philadelphia Record. Some Extraordinary Mothers. Probably the youngest grandmother of whom wo have record was a Lady Child of Shropshire , England. She had married at 12 years of ago and had a child before her thirteenth year was completed. This child in turn married while still very jouug , with the result that Lady Child was a grandmother at 27. The most extraordinary cases of motherhood were those of Mrs. Honey- wood of Charing , in Kent , and Lady Temple of Stow. When the former died , on May 10 , 1G20 , aged 93 , she counted as her descendants 1C children , 114 grandchildren , 228 great-grandchildren and 9 great-great-grandchildren. The other case was even moro remarkable. Lady Temple , who died in 105 ( > , had give birth to 4 sous and 9 daughters and lived to see moro than 700 descend ants. Taste of Dolled AVater. In advocating the practice of boiling water ( and milk ) of uncertain purity Professor Bizzozero combats the preju dice against boiled water as a bevurago. He maintains that the "tasto" fre quently complained of in boiled water is really caused by the kettle and can scarcely bo duo to the absence of dis solved air , of which water from wells of great depth often contains very little. Pittsburg Dispatch A Question of Locality. "I'll tell you ouo thing , " said Mad- pop to his long suffering wife , "if Willy does not behave himself , I'll give him the worst spanking ho ever had. He'll get it in the neck. " "Do bo serious , " my dear , " replied Mrs. Madpop. "The neck is no place on which to spank a child. " Harper's Bazar. Which End ? Irascible Lieutenant ( do\vn euglno room tube ) Is there a blithering idiot at the end of this tube ? Voice From the Engine Room Not at this end , sir.Punch. . * * $ - " * - . 1 { J' McCCOK , NEB. J't er -AMD- < t j > PUKLISIIKli . OF A.NJO UEALEi : I > Note BOOKS , Receipt. . Books , Scale BOOKS. DEALER Office Supplies -AND- STATIONERY . OF ALL KINDS. iCE , FIRST DOOR NORTH OF THK rOSTOFFlCH McGOOK , NEBRASKA ,