l ST"""! -- . f ul,atMftMigigftgaftIlg-tfraMB-....-. .-. .- ii an IBSSSBSm ""wiafcsssttT! asSWWBBWUttrr revival Movement in wales. DEATH OF SENATOR BATE; FINANCIAL RECORD THE BEST. t'. I . . ad .Br' -,,.0 .- r -d into the control of the Japanese. lack Broadcloth. Black is as popular if not more so (haa it was earlier in the season. A '. " fcodel recently turned out by a lead-- "" lag dressmaker in black broadcloth :'. has a tight-fitting coat and an almost plain skirt that just clears the ground. I -The coat tits tightly in the back by .means of curved seams, and a piece -ef the cloth about five inches wide and pointed at the lower end extends ..from the neck down the center of the back to a little below the waist line " and Is stitched twice at the edges. ." On each side of the coat skirts on " bcth sides of the center seam similar - rotated sections of the cloth appear. .The sleeves are almost tight-fitting. Another attractive cloth model in .'. steel gray has a plain skirt cut ankle ' , length and is untrimmed. The coat is a tailor-made affair, partly loose ftting and partly tight-fitting, single- Lreasted and reaches to the knees. ' - with a velvet turnover collar and deep velvet turnover cuffs. A strap " runs across the center of the back to ..told it in close to the waist line. Crrectolre Coats. There is a decided liking shown for the well fitting dircctoire coat, with sleeves that set to the shape of the arm. though fancifully puckered and gathered and gauged very often, and with the outline of the figure carefully preserved. Smart Silk "At Home" Oress. This is designed for afternoon wear. but would be suitable for a home din- r.ei frock too. It is of light taffetas. trimmed with frills cf narrow black and white lace and medallions of the iMi:e lace; black velvet bows as a "ladder." Jellied Cranges. Cat off a small portion of the ends of oiangos. rcoop out the pulp and juice. Fill with orange jelly before it is thoroughly hard, anil let the or anges stand on ice. When set. cut in quarters and serve on green leaes. To make orange jelly, pit juice of or anges into agrtc saucepan, with 1 cup sugar. 1 pint or hot water and 1 tea- i spoon orange extract. When sugar is dissolved add box powdered gela tine. When col fill oranges. 1 Fichus Again in Vogue. ' A most universally becoming fash ion has been brought again into popu lar favor by the revival of the Marie Antoinette modes. The fichu returns In many varieties and is frequently used for the neck of the evening gown, although its grace and simplici ty recommend it for any dress fash ioned of soft, clinging materials after the fashion of the French custom dur ing the time of Marie Antoinette. Chiffon is the most successful ma terial that can be found for the fichu. lut net and lace may be used with effect. The fichu should be draped around the shoulders very loosely. that it may fall in graceful folds, and listened in front in a soft knot. It is interesting to find that the flat-irdn turban still is to remain one of the leading styles in hats this spring, for its convenience in battling against the March winds is appreciat ed by its feminine admirers. A num ber are being shown of shirred taf feta, with the top crown of horsehair braid, and chiffon, shirred and tucked. is also used in covering the turban. In spite of the acknowledged utility Of the "trotteuse" skirt for practical purposes, English tailors are making the smart frocks with long skirts. They do not trail the ground, but are not allowed to show much boot. The plaited skirts, however, must always "be short, close-fitting about the hips and very full at the bottom. Sunderland Pudding. Half cup sugar. cup of butter. Vz fiat of milk. 1 cup of sifted flour and S eggs. Heat the milk hot: stir in the , butter and let it cool before the oth er ingredients are added to it; then tir in the sugar, flour and beaten - .Jolks of 3 and whites of 2 eggs. Fla ""Tbx with a little grated lemon rind and" beat the mixture well. Bake to . well buttered cups half filled with the better for about half an hour. Serve with, any 'sweet sauce, and the white ef-1 egg beaten with 1 spoonful of CBgar dropped on each pudding Is small drops. ' The Morning Costume. The skirts of morning costumes ill continue to be cut short, and they tt ill fit closely about the hips, but tt-ey must flare a little below the "line of the knee. With the long coats are worn the round skirts, either touching or just freeing the ground. These skirts are more becoming than the very short ones unless a woman has a pretty foot, and they are the only eaes that can be worn with the redin- ' totes. The very light weight broad- .doth will be worn well into the sum mer, and tweeds, serges and coarse caavases will come in for their share of sopalarity. lemtftf Styles. Skirts are to be fuller tham ever asset the feet every conceivable trick that wi.l get a few more inches fm . th wMtn wfll be enoloyed: bat out the hips they will fit smoothly. Lace will be everywhere, principal . Irish crochet sad Valencietnes; a se. which Is as beautiful as it daring, betas the ccmbiain? th "two. And lace will be used in every possible way. from allovers and strips and edgings to wonderful motifs which contain a host of suggestions In them selves for unusual, original uses. Even embroideries will be used to trim these dresses, but embroideries this year have lifted themselves high above anything we've ever known be fore, and come in a new dignity that fits them for any use. t3HS& When cooking sausages let them heat very gradually and the skins will tot burst. To keep milk sweet for several days add a teaspoonful of fine salt to every quar. of milk. Stand pancake batter lor two hours beiore frying- Beat it up again just before using. Bones and bacon rind should never 1) thrown away, but added to the stock pot when making soup. To brighten eyeglasses rub up the glasses with a piece of tissue paper. There is nothing better for the pur pose. When making sauces dissolve the butter in the stewpan, add the flour, stir well, and then gradually add the liquor. To make varnish dissolve a pound and a half of shellac in a gallon of naphtha. Add a small quantity of dragon's blood to give it a good color. In Royal Purple Cloth. Somewhat conspicuous, but very stylish, is a costume of royal purple cloth. The round skirt is laid in wide plaits. The coat has plaits an inch v ide running down to and through the sleeves below the elbows. These piaits run crosswise and taper down tt. points where they end near the elbow. The sleeve from the elbow down is tight fitting. Novelty Silks. In the new goods there are so many novelty silks that one hesitates to sti.rt upon the task of naming them, krowing it to he absolutely hopeless. The chiffon taffeta is one of the best of taffetas. It is very light in weight jet strong. And there is a taffeta glace which is lovely and of the non wrinkle order. Taffeta by the way has been marvelously improved the last season and it now wears very well indeed. No eye can turn away from the pop lins and their cousins the mohairs and the brilliantines and sicilliennes with out a sigh. Velvet Walking Costume. An attractive short walking cos tume of black velvet has a skirt gored to fit the fieure and in the back are two underlying plaits, and scanter ones in the center fronts are pressed in and secured invisibly, while down each side are rows of small old sil vei buttons. The blouse closes with double rows of buttons to match the skirt and the sleeves are plaited and IkM in place by the buttons. The blouse is collarless and trimmed with several rows of silk braid. udoir Confidences Both plaited and circular skirts will be worn. Suppleness and luster are charac teristics of the fashionable silks. Skirts will only be trimmed at or near the bottom. The long unbroken line is the thing fo: this season. Amethysts are promised consider able vogue this season and will be worn alone and combined with pearls and diamonds. For summer wear are even the daintiest of while tulle and lace RECEPTION GOWNS FROM PARIS. The gown on the seated figure is of violet faille. A fancy border cut fiom velvet of a little deeper shade finishes the skirt at the bottom. The bodice is draped, forming a fort of bolero covered with a large shoulder collar of venise lace. The reverse are of velvet, the collar of green satin embroidered in gold. Pendants of gold hang from the points of the revers over the draped corslet of the material. The chemisette is of white mousseline de soie. with jabot of lace. The short sleeve puffs are fin- ished with puffs and frills of the venise lace. The ntt gown is of soft white sctin. The skirt is gathered at the top and trimmed at the bottom with a ianc uoraei or cream-colored guipure insertion. The bodice is draped and fastened little on one with blue velvet but- l tons und ornamented with a jabot of toques and small chip hats, green, brown and biscuit color. A coarse embroidered white or light-colored linen, resembling a stamped leather effect. Is a pretty material, and will be used as a note of originality in the way of vests, col lars and cuffs on many of the light cloth and cashmere toileU this com ing spring. Spinach in Molds. Boil the spinach, press out every drop of water and chop fine. Cook together in a saucepan a tablespoon ful of butter and two of flour. Add the spinach with pepper and salt to taste; cook for five minutes. Butter the insides of muffin-tins or pate-pans and press the spinach hard into these. Set in the oven to keep hot while you make a white sauce. Carefully turn out the forms of spinach on a hot platter, lay a slice of hard-boiled egg on the top of each form and pour the white sauce aiound it. Pork Cake. One pound salt pork chopped fine. 1 round of raisins, 1 pound of currants, pound of citron. 1 quart flour. 1 pint of brown sugar, 1 pint cf boiling water, pint of molasses. 2 teaspoon fuls each of cloves and cinnamon, grated rind of 1 lemon, 1 tablespoon ful of soda dissolved in hot water; pour the water on the perk, stir until melted, then pass through the colan der; add the sugar, molasses, spice and half of the flour; rub the fruit In 1 gill of the flour, then add it to the soda and the rest of the flour; bake in well buttered tins in a hot, steady oven. Black velvet with white cloth vest. embroidered Bits of Lace. A bit of real lace will often con tribute greatly to the style of a frock. and it is an excellent plan to rip from the garments before they are thrown aside any lace trimmings. No matter how badly soiled, every scrap of lace is worth saving. And this applies to the imitations as well as to the real, for if there is only sufficient to trim a stock collar it may be used for that purpose very conveniently and effectively on some iuture occasion, and as lace does not occupy a great deal of space and is not so popular with most as are many other materials it may easily be pre served. New Cretonnes Are Lovely. Cretonne will be more popular than ever this summer for furniture cover ings, cushions and for drapery. The latest ones include very dainty stripes, natural flower designs, verdure effects. Louis XV. Louis XVI and 1'art nou veau. with grounds in moire and jas per, with cafe au lait given special prominence as being very new. lace. It is finished around the low neck with a bertha of satin, bordered with guipure, over which is a ruffle of white lace, headed by a band of blue velvet. The short sleeves forming double puffs are finished with bands of the satin, trimmed with guipure insertion. The third gown is of delicate laven der taffeta. The full skirt forms a shirred corslet, and is trimmed at the bottom with three ruches of the silk, the two upper ones arranged in fes toons. The bolero is shirred along the shoulders and at the bottom, where It is finished with a stitched band f the silk. The waistcoat is of guipure, with edges and knots of pink panne. The elbow sleeves are puffed at th ton men fitted to the arms, where tby are stirred end draped, forming little headings or frills. They are finished with narrow ruffles of the material end of guipure. MT nr VPisM -ffiQySisSsvBST Mr SsSSaj " Jt xPCC l MUKDEN ALWAYS BATTLE POINT Wars Have Raged Around Than Three Mukden, the ancient city, now pass ed into the control of the Japanese, vas described last August in this manner by an American war corre- puadent: "Most cities of China proper have 7.212 distinct smells. Mukden has but 6,214; it has been Russianized and whenever possible the Russian has introduced clean streets, some kind of a sewerage system, orderly houses; hence Mukden is now known as the cleanest town of the many where the filthy Chinese have pre dominated in the past." Mukden belongs to the province of Shingklng and on the line of railway running north it is about half way between Nluchwang and Kuangchang- tsu. which belongs to the province of Kirin. Now aside from the fact that Muk den holds the sacred tombs of the ancient Manchu or "pure" dynasty it has other interest in that it has been one of the world's central battle points since 1,100 years or more be fore Christ. ' Where Russian and Japan have been contesting longer than a year, race after race, and nation after na tion, have hurled themselves against each other for certainly 3,000 years. The soil about Mukden, the ranges of the Long White Mountain, the great stretches of gray plains have been soaked with the blood of tens of thou sands of warriors. It is a Golgotha a place of bones and the wraiths of men who have gone to their final judgment in con quest or plunder. Peopled Long Before Christ. Dates in Chinese or Mongolian his tory are much mixed, but so far as accuracy can be depended upon Muk den was a settlement long before Christ was born. The Prince of Pohai had some possessions there about 710 B. C, and at one time Chi nese allegiance was thrown off en tirely and a centralized government RUSSIAN WORKMEN Half a Rcom Tor a Workingman's Curtain Eeiongs to Another Family. established with five royal residences, one of which rote at Mukdm. Then eame Khiian fiom Hulan and he established the Liao dynasty and Mukden, not yet a very notable place, but already battle-tossed, passed into other hands. Aftcrwaul the Jurchin had their try and they etabl:shed the Kin or golden dynasty and made Mukden a great trading post on the central highways. These highways extended up to the boundaries of the savage tribes on the north into He-lung-kiang and far along the Amur River extended south to modern Peking, to Hankow, to Canton and even into India. Princes of the royal blood left Muk den in those days of the beginnings, and made two and three year pil grimages to India to learn strange tilings from wise men and to trade in jewels and fabrics. Fifteen hundred j-ears after Christ was born Nurhachu had his chief seat of government in the south of the Long White mountain, about 100 miles east of Mukden. Mukden itself had then risen to be one of the most important trading points of the North. It has been stated that its annual volume of business rose into the millions, and that the wealth and fashion of the North congregated there to bargain, play politics, love and hate. Army Was Slaughtered. In 1616 Mukden saw a wonderful army for those days before its gates. Nurhachu had taken to himself the title of "heaven-decreed," and de clared war on China. An army of 200,000 was sent against him. but, as the chroniclers related afterward: "He slaughtered all; none returned to say of how their end came." Mukden was captured by him in Artillery Solar Ray Fire. Attention was drawn some time ago by the Army and Navy Gazette to a method of representing artillery fire by deflecting light upon the object aimed at, which was tried in France last year. A similar system is be ing experimented with in Austria, the solar rays being reflected upon the object. These rays are visible to the troops and to their leaders, as well as to the umpires, whose decisions are said thus to be facilitated. The ap paratus is used from about 2,000 to 3,000 yards. He Figures Wrong. "The demands of society are so ex acting and the rules of dress so inex orable that the area of cuticle avail able for vaccination purposes is con stantly becoming smaller," wrote the health officer in his annual report. Between party gowns and bathing suits there is not much opportunity left." "You are wrong, doctor, there are at leas two months between party gowns and bathing suits. You must figure time, and not inches." Maclaren's Sensible Idea. Lecturing the other night at Liver pool, the Rev. Ian Maclaren said: "No man Is justified in marrying who cannot obtain a first-class life certi ficate from a really good insurance company." Chief Buddhist Sovereign. The king of Slam is the only inde pendent Bndahist sovereign in the world, and is, therefore, looked upon as the chief supporter of the religion of Buddha. 4SSV9' ':W" t' V BSSwBsHSBSSSSflsSSV ' v" if ' the "City off Tombs" for More Thousand Years 1C21 after terrific fighting and a slaughter, if we may believe the stat isticians, that far exceeds what has re cently occurred there. All prisoners taken were promptly beheaded. Lisoyang was captured and made the capital, and seventy other cities promptly surrendered. In 1644 the Mancbus, risen to great power, marched into China and placed one of their own on the throne of that government, and a Manchu has ruled there ever since. In the eighteenth century Mukden rose to great com mercial and political importance, but by the time of the opening of the nineteenth century, through causes largely due to the decay of the Man chu dynasty, the city declined in im portance, and when the Russians be gan their active control of the com munity, after the Chinese-Japanese war of 1894. they found it a plaoe of squalor, filth and disease. Sacred Tombs Preserved. The sacred tombs has been pre served, but the city was almost iso lated from the world; its people indo lent, careless, out of touch with the world. The Russians made it a base of commercial and military supplies, introduced some modern methods of sanitation and proposed to make it the half-way station between Port Ar thur and Harbin. Now the Japanese have it. To them it may be their northern ter minal in the new land they will domi nate, although in all probability, when it comes to making the final treaty, they will dominate far to the Kuang-chang-tsu district. Aside from the Russian population 90 per cent of the inhabitants of Mukden are Chinese. The only language taught in the city schools is Chinese. The Japanese probably will introduce entirely mod ern methods of education and com merce. In 3.000 years there have been fought in front of or about Mukden some twenty-odd noted battles of the HERDED LI KE CATTLE. Home; the Cther Half Behind the Orient, and it is conservatively esti mated that within and about the city j during that time more than 5,000.000 ; men have been engaged in bloody struggles for the control of territory i and government. Roused Artist from Inaction. Phil May. the English artist, who died not long ago. had fits of laziness and when suffering from this ailment found it very difficult to work. On one occasion he had promised a coi oied design for the Christmas number of a weekly. The day fixed for its de livery passed by. but no design was forthcoming. The publisher went hunting for him and found him at a seaside hotel enjoying a time of abso lute inaction. Without going to see Mr. May, he hired six sandwich men lo parade up and down before the ar tist's window with boards bearing dif teient legends. This was their tenor: "What about our Christmas cover?" "We are waiting for that cover." It was a delightful reminder and in a tew days the publishers received one ot the most brilliant designs May had ever executed. New Idea for Inaugural Parade. A North Carolina man who thought that the inaugural parade was a good deal like a circus procession, wrote to the inaugural committee as follows: "1 wud like to cum to Washington and play the countryman in the pro cession. I am the greatest rube you ever seed, and am sure that I cud act the part better than any man in the country. I am a republican and want to show these trifln democrats what a man will do for his president. I am sure I can please yu. I will work for my grub and 50 cents a day, includin' carfare." khhkthkh German Students. xhis winter semester there are at the several German universities 39.716 matriculated students, against 39,581 during the last summer semester, and 39.718 last winter. At the beginning of the nineties there were in round numbers 29,000 students, and in the winter of 1894-95, 28.105; the third ten thousand was not reached until the winter of 1897-98, when the number was 31.110, since which time there has been a steady increase. The larg est number this winter is at Beriin, 4 Life of Country Physician. The strenuousness of the life of the country physician is illustrated in the case of Dr. George H. Coombs, of Waldboro, Me., who, during the recent storm, found it impossible to run his automobile or force his horses through the mountain-high snowdrifts, walked to West Waldboro and back, a total distance of eight miles, to see a patient. The incident illustrates also the devotion of the conscientious physician to his patients. Boston Transcript. Bankers to Donate Home. Baiersdorf. Bavaria, it to have a free home for children, which is to be erected by the Seligman firm of New York, In memory of David and Fanny Seligman, parents of the Sel igman brothers, who lived and died in that place. British Strikes Decrease. Strikes were lew in Great iiniain last year. Only one in every 100 of the industrial population had any trouble with an employer. William T. Stead Greatly Impressed by Its Force and Power. The vast congregations were as so berly sane, as orderly, and at least is reverent as any congregation I ever saw beneath the dome of St. Paul's. But it waft aflame with a passionate religious enthusiasm, the like of which I have never seen in St. Paul's. Tier above tier from the crowded aisles to the loftiest gallery sat or stood, as necessity dictated, eager hundreds of serious men and thought ful women, their eyes riveted upon the platform or upon whatever other part of the building was the storm center of the meeting. There was absolutely nothing wild, violent, hysterical, unless it be hys terical for the laboring breast to heave with sobbing that cannot be re pressed, and the throat to choke with emotion as a sense of the awful hor ror and shame of a wasted life sud denly bursts upon the soul. On all sides there was the solemn gladness of men and women upon whose eyes has dawned the splendor of a new day, the foretaste of whose glories they are enjoying in the quickened sense of human fellowship and a keen glad zest added to their own lives. Employers tell me that the quality of the work the miners are putting in has improved. Waste is less, men gb to their daily toil with a new spirit of gladness in their labor. In the long dim galleries of the mine, where once the hauliers swore at their ponies in Welshifled English terms of blas phemy, there is now but to be heard the haunting melody of the revival mu sic. The pit ponies, like the Ameri can mules, have been driven by oaths and curses since they first bore the yoke, are being retrained to do their work without the incentive of profan ity. There is less drinking, less idle ness, less gambling. Men record with almost incredulous amazement, how one football player after another has foresworn cards and drink and the gladiatorial games, and is living a so ber and godly life, putting his energy into the revival. More wonderful still, and almost incredible to those who know how journalism lives and thrives upon gambling, and hoV Tory ism is broad-based upon the drinking habits of the people, the Tory daily paper of South Wales has devoted its columns day after day to reporting and defending the movement which declares war to the death against both gambling and drink. From "The Great Religious Revival in Wales." by William T. Stead, in the American Monthly Review of Reviews. MAY FIND MURDER MOTIVE. In Tales of "Graft" Police Expect to Clear Up Stanford Mystery. Miss Bertha Berner and Miss May Hunt, secretary and maid, respective- Miss Bertha Berner. ly. to the late Mrs. Stantord. havt been instructed by the police not tc leave Honolulu. It is believed that among the stories of household quar rels and graft, a hint of the motive for murder may be found. Albert Beverly, the ex-butler, has, it is said, made a statement to the police to the effect that in all, by means of "rake downs" and commis sions he had "grafted" about $2,100. He reiterates his story that he divid ed his "rake down" with Miss Berner, and that her share amounted to be tween $1,000 and $1,100. Flying Machines and Fighting. Santos Dumont szys that the recent generation will see a perfect flying machine that will make war impos sible. There may be a perfect flying machine, but how that is going to make war impossible is not so plain to a man on the ground as it appears to be to M. Dumont. He probably in tends to carry explosives and drop them onto the heads of the people, but the other fellows will be able to do the same thing, leaving, we should say, war not only possible, but might ily destructive. If affairs between bel ligerent powers could be so adjusted that only one of them could have re course to flying machines, and when the hostilities break out that one should get into the machines and fly away, then war might be said to nave become impossible. Milwaukee Free Press. Dumb Man Speaks. Fifteen months ago Thomas Witty, a man employed in Armstrong's ship yard, woke up one morning and found that he had lost the faculty of speech. Remaining dumb, he gave up his employment. On Saturday he was selling oranges, with his son shouting for him, when somebody asked him The price of the oranges, and much to his own astonishment his long at tempted utterance came, for he re plied. "Four a penny." Since that mo ment he has been able to speak as well as ever. London Daily Mail. Doctors' Race at a Fair. An amusing feature of the closing day of the north Georgia fair held at Cbickamauga was a "doctors' race," The twelve physicians who took part in the contest had their horses sta bled near by and were themselvc-s undressed and in bed. At the stroke of the gong they had to dress, hitch their horses to their vehicles and drive one mile to a supposed patient. The race was won by Dr. Rudesell. Dr. Elder was second and Dr. Hunter third. Czar a Saddened Man. The czar is said to have described himself recently as "the saddest man in Europe." The czarina is anxious to spend the summer in England, but she will not leave her husband to face present difficulties alone. Presence sf Mind. A policeman of SoutI: Shields, Eng lanu, ground up a. Iay pipe, adminis tered the powder as an emetic to a girl who had taken poison and ao saved her life. Veteran Soldier and Statesman Suc cumbs to Pneumonia. United States Senator William Brimage Bate of Tennessee, twice governor of his state, a veteran of both the Mexican and civil wars, ris ing from private to major general in the latter and for eighteen years a conspicuous member of the upper house of congress, died at his hotel apartments In Washington. March ?. aged 78 years. Death was rue to pBeumoala and defective heart. Sen ator Bate attended the Inauguration ceremonies on March 4 and his death Is believed to be due primarily to ex posture on that occasion. Senator Bate took his seat In the senate in 1887 and was recently sworn in for another term of six years. He was the ranking minority member of the committee on territories, military af fairs and agriculture and forestry, al so a member of several minor com mittees and chairman of one of the minority committees. Besides the widow, two daughters. Mrs. Thomas F. Masten of Tennessee and Mrs. Childs of Los Angeles, survive the senator. Both houses of the general assembly of Tennessee took appro priate action on the death of Senator Bate. JOKE ON PARIS LAWYERS. Members of the Bar Supposed to Work Only for Justice. The wits of the Boulevards have been furnished with a fruitful topic by the civil court of Paris, which has ordered a lawyer to return the greater part of the fees he received in a cer tain case. It is not in the enforced-return of the money, however, that the humor lies, but in the ground on which the court based its action. M. J. Comely, who records the incident, says the judge declared that members of the bar there work for justice, not for money, and have no legal claim to one sou for services! This, it appears, has been a hallow ed fiction since the days of St. Iuis and we can well believe that its re crudescence at this time as a judicial act nas caused a commotion among the lawyers of Paris. CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN. Gorgeous Raiment a Necessity for Those in Authority. There is no power without clothes. It is the power that governs the hu man race. Strip its chiefs to the skin. and no state could be governed; naked officials could exercise no authority; they would look (and be) like every body else commonplace, inconsequen tial. A policeman in plan clothes is one man. in his uniform he is ten. Clothes and titles are the most potent thing, the most formidable intliience in the earth. They move the human race to willing and spontaneous re spect for the judge, the general, the admiral, the bishop, the ambassador, the frivolous earl, the idiot duke, the sultan, the king, the emperor. No great title is efficient without clothes to support it. In naked tribes of sav ages the kings wear some kind of rag or decoration which they make sacred to themselves and allow no one else to wear. The king or the great Fan tribe wears a bit of leopard skin on his shoulder it is sacred to royal ty; the rest of him is perfectly naked. Without this bit of leopard skin to awe and impress the people he would not be able to keep his job. "Mark Twain" in North American Review. Photographed Wrong Man. A Washington photographer want ed the picture of the president's friend Seth Bullock, the sheriff of Dead wood, who was selected to lead the cowboy bunch in the inaugural procession. He sent an assistant out to round up Bullock and bring him to be photographed. Presently the assistant came back with a gray-mus-tached man in tow and announced that this was the man wanted. The man sat for several pictures. As he was going out the clerk in the gal lery said: "By the way. Mr. Bullock, please give me your full name for the pictures." "Bullock nothing!" said the man. "I am not Bullock. I am Morgan Bulkeley, senator-elect from Connecticut." A Curious Clock. One of the most curious clocks In the world Is. perhaps, that which tells the times to the inhabitants of a little cry, which is nothing but a face, backwood town, and which was con structed some time ago. The machin hands. and lever, is connected with a geyser, which shoots out an im mense column of hot water every thirty-eight seconds. This spouting never varies to the tenth of a second. Every time the water spouts up it strikes the lever and moves the hands forward thirty-eight seconds. Fish With Two Kinds of Eyes. The anableps. or stargazer. a 3sk of the cyprodont family, found in riv ers of Guiana. Surinam and Brazil, has each of its eyes divided into an Jpper and a lower portion by an opaque horizontal line. This gives it in effect two pupils in each eye, one suited for seeing in the air and the other for seeing is the water. The fish is in the hahic of swimming at the surface with its head sometimes above, sometimes be low the water line. Fishing Gazette. Protestant Church for Panama. Bishop Thomas B. Neely. of the Methodist Episcopal church, is plan ning for the erection of a Protestant church In Panama. He has almost completed negotiations for the pur chase of the ruins of the church of Santo Domingo. Fifty-Three Sundays in 1905. j. tcuiiat ct is mat oo ojia on Sunday and wili end oa Sunday and therefore has fifty-three Sunday, i This will not occur asain ia 210 years, j Once in History Has Citv of Mexico Repudiated Debt. The City of Mexico has been doing' business for about 380 years. There is probably no capital in the civilized world that during the same period baa been the center of more wars of con quest or revolution, and yet. through all the troublesome days of these cen turies, this city has maintained Its' dnancial reputation free front blemish. Kings have come and gone, viceroy has succeeded viceroy, emperors have flourished for a brief regime and rival factions have striven for the' presidency. loans have been forced by one general government to be re pudiated by the next, bonds were is sued during the French occupancy that the republic would not assume, but during all the strife the ancient capital of the Aztecs cherished Its financial integrity as its choicest Jew el and to-day rejoices in the record thst not once in all its long history has a debt been repudiated. Modern Mexico. TO DIRECT CANAL CUTTING. Chief Engineer Wallace Likely to Be Supreme in Panama. Chief Engineer John F. Wallace. who will probably be the actual work--ing head of the Panama Canal com- mission under the proposed reorganl-' zation of that body, and who is likely, to be the real builder of the canal) under the president's determination to intnist that work to the ablest man the country can produce, is one of tho, best known civil engineers in this, country, and so well known abroad and so highly esteemed that he has been elected to membership in many, of the most scientific bodies of Eu rope. For many years he was connect ed with the Illinois Central railroad." working up through all the grades to the office of general manager, a post he hid at the time he was selected some months ago by the canal com mission for the office of chief engi neer. How We Catch Cold. The rationale of the causation of the ordinary cold" is pretty well un derstood at the present .ay, and it is generally conceded that when circu latory disturbances or vital depres sions are produced as the result of localized or general chilling of the body surface, newly entered or already present pathogenic bacteria are en abled to attack the body with very good chances of success. At such times it is said that the powers of resistance are below par. and. conse quently, the bacterid gain an easy victory. This point was illustrated ill telling fashion by Otirck. "..ho found that rabbits infected with pneumococ ci developed pneumonia if they wero subjected to severe cold, whereas un chilled control animals survived. Medical Record. Exclusive Religious Circles. There is a good deal of comment just now on the exclusive attitude of certain New York churches. In siimo it is impossible to purchase a pew or even a sitting. The demand for pews in Grace church is so great that names have been on the waiting list for years. In several other fashion able houses of worship the condition is the same. Some newcomers of ureat wealth, eager to touch elbows with the most orthodox of respectabil ity, secure pews by sublease, but this is a costly kind of enterprise. It is not uncommon to hear of pews sell ing for $1,500 or more. Indetd. with in a week or two pew 40 of Graco church sold for $1,550. In St. Thom as' church single sittings sell for $150. The People's College. The American boy dn-s not. as a rule, take kindly to early specialisa tion, says Walter I Hervey in the Chautauquan. The general high school course, whether classical or scientific, attracts the vast majority of students and is likely to do so for many years to come. The typical American high school is one whoe chief aim is to provide Knral cul ture and equipment for lif irrespec tive of academic or vocational des tination. This conception ot the high school i-; reJU-cted in the name by which it is often cal'ed "the peo ples' college " Benefited by American Education. Ton? Shin Ye. just appointed Chi nese ambassador to England, wax one of the second delegation of thirty youths sent to this country, in 1S72 to be educated. He was then 12 years old. He and another lad were taken in hand by E f Gardner of Spring field. Mass. with whom they remain ed for two year?. Then, having made great progress in the study of En glish, they went to school. Tons re mained in the United States for six years. He finished his educate jn China. A Botany Tea. Dr. Peebles, assistant professor of biology a: the Woman's roHt-ne. and some of her students gae a trctqu botany tea m ne of :ae s-ince rooms. All the refreshments, which were of a ege table compound v-c-pt salt, were ata vrith fctMratry instruments. The nrA conLt?it f lettuce, tomato- 5. a?ara: ur. olives, ninuer. frail salad sal vkc cuits. The iva. was 5tir M :a table ever laborat-jrj rfass? isli mt.re Americas. Great Chess Plaer Dd. Rusia has hst i: best knoara chess player by the data. a: thtr ae of 54. of Emmanutl Schizers. He had been for se.Tal Jr3 a victim oj great deprt-Sidoa. hlrs prevtcted him taking part in any contests. Shecks Lon (toners. London has discovered. Xo Its hor ror. tti ue "W-nc tas m rae fecade of the Maas!on noose, tit !erl mayor's resilei:ce. were "iaaIe. ic Germany." Not i .! I I .k