is TE MUCH ADO. When you think of it, friend, the worries, The troubles that wear you out, Are often the veriest trifles, That common =erse would flout ; They write the forcheard with wrinkles, They bow the shoulder with care, Yet a little patience would show vou, friend. Just how their weight to bear. It's somebody late to breakfust And the cotfee growing cold ; It's a button that isn’t fastened, ol Or a string too slight to hold : And time and temper are wasted, And fun is driven away, And all for the want of gentleness, The home is spoiled for a day. And the children make a litter Of tovs upon the floor. And Johnny fergets to wipe his feet, And Susie to shut the door ; And who that hears you scolding, Which after awhile you'll rue. Wood deem those heedless little ones Just all the world to you ? “Tis well that God and the angels Know better far than we, That our conscience and our conduct, friends, So seldom quite agree. "Pis well that the Lord is pitient, And sees, not what we are. But what, at our best, we are fain to be, Unmoved by strife and jar. Ab me! for the little tritles, Of which our bitter brew Of sorrow and trouble is often mixed, As weakly, with much ado, We meet the smaller worries, Thatare quickly out of sight, When the sweep of a dark winged angel Obscures our ee with night. A BANK ROBBER. * About four years ago, while 1 was ying teller of the State National ank, in a flourishing town in the West, the events I am about to relate occurred. The story is almost exactly true, being changed here only in un- important events. A partial account of the affair was published in a local per, and some of my readers may have seen it. When I left Ohio I crated up my bicycle and sent it along by express. It arrived in perfect order, and when the roads were in good condition I took many a pleasant spin after bank- ing hours. One summer morning after a de- lighttul after-breakrast run in the brac- ing mountain air, I rode up to the bank, and having cleaned and oftled _ my bicycle, stored it in one of the rooms at the rear of the banking office. Then I went leisurely about my work. The first thing to do was to open the vault, a substantial structure of mason- ry with iron doors and bracings, and a floor of square blocks of stone. The vault was not made specially strong against burglars, for the cash was kept in the safe within. The vault was intended only to protect the books and records by fire. Any mere bungler of a cracksman could have got into it in an hour or two. The safe, however, was as nearly burglar proof as the best steel and latest improved locks could make it. The vault had two doors, an inner and an outer, which were fastened hy combination locks. Between the two doors was a stone floor, like that in- gide of the vault. I swung the outer door open with- out difficulty, but when I pulled the inner door, to my surprise it scraped on the stone floor, and considerable force was required to pull it over the obstruction, and swing it fully open. What was the cause of this obstrue- tion ? Had the hinges of the door been worn so as to let it down ? Had faulty construction in the floor allowed one of the stones to slip gradually out of place and interfere with the door ? Had the building been settling and the vault floors thrown out of level 2 Op —and my heart beat faster at the thought—had some one been tamper- ing with the hinges ? In any case there was need of a thorough investigation, but what was to be done ? The cashier was out of town, and the president had told me the nizht before that he would leave on the morning's train for Enterprise, to settle up a disputed balance with our correspondent there. The absence of both officers left me in first author ity. But before I decided what to do, the safe must be examined to see if it had been tampered with. I hurriedly en- tered the vault and scanned the exte- rior of the safe. No marks ot violence appeared. The door was protected by a time lock, and by three combination locks to hold the bolts after the time lock had released them. The clocks had been set for 8 o'clock,and were now run down. The tumblers of the combinations had clicked in quick time as | hurriedly whirled the knobs. Bills, geld and silver Jay undisturbed, just as [ had left them the evening be- fore. Now what was to be done? I did not like to assume responsibilities which properly belonged to some one else. And here was a problem which sibly concerned the very life of the ank. Unless I was forced by cir cumstances, the solving of it was not tor me. I gave myself three minutes for a decision. The cashier was out ef reach, and the president was now on his way to the station. If 1 could reach the station before the train left, I could bring him back. The train was due at 8.55, and the clock now marked 8.35. The station was about four miles from the town. When the railroad was built it was found necessary to run it down the valley ; and so the town which lay back on the tableland was left that distance to the west. It would be impossible to get a horse and buggy, and get to the station in the time allotted. My bicycle! TI could try it, there was a chance of success. The two other clerks had come into the bank, and were at work at their | desks. I got out the cash needed at the counter, remarked quietly to the clerks that I was going out for a few my machine out of the rear door and mounted. The road was good, and I was nerved to great exertion, and al- though it required twenty minutes of as hard work as I ever did, I succeed- ed. The dark roof the low station build- ing came in sight, just as up the val- ley I saw the smoke of the approach. ing train. 1 was not too late. I whisked up to the station and hurried to Mr. Axtell, the president. who, va- lise in hand, was looking up the track at the train. I related to him all told in a very few words. there was to be He asked {mea few questions and then said : “Of course I will go back to town. You return by your bicycle, and I will follow by the stage. Go to the bank and attend to business as usual. When I get in we will decide what to do.” I made my return trip with all pos: sible speed, and took my place at the teller window. For twenty minutes business quietly proceeded. Mr. Axtell came leisurely into the bank soon after. He went into the vault, examined the tloor, and he ran his hand ajJong the cracks between the stones. A moment's inspection satis- fied him. He came out and told me that he was convinced some one was tunnelling under the vault. He asked me to inform the clerks, and tojkeep a close watch over everything until he should come back, and hurried away. He presently returned with two of the bank's directors whom he took into the vault, pointed out the suspi- cious appearance, and explained his theory of the cause. The bank building stood on the southeast corner of the intersection of two principal streets, At the rer was an alley, and across that a large brick building. On the east side, touching the bank, was a frame structure oceu- pied by a clothing firm. Beyond, with a three foot passage intervening, stood an adobe house. The passage way ran through from street to alley. In the building across the alley there was no opportunity, Mr. Axtell thought, for working a tunnel; there- fore he concluded the attack would be from the east. The members of the firm next door were old citizens, and not to be suspected. Of the adobe house he knew nothing. This, then, was the first point for examination. Mr. Axtell put a revolver in his pocket, and going out the back door of ur building walked up the alley to the adobe house, and entered a rickety door, which he found unlocked. Here he discovered a bare empty room, evi- dently long unoccupied. But on the floor were tracks of muddy boots. Upon examination he found that the flooring in the corner of the room was cut through, and a trap door had been placed there. At one side of the door an iron staple was driven, apparently serving as a handle for lifting it, Ie raised the trap cautiously, and saw a barrel set into the ground pointing in the direction of the bank. Then he lowered the trap carefully, and as care- fully left the building. There was no longer any doubt. The tunnel was there, and the robbers might be ready to make their final movement on the bank that very night. It was scarcely probable that they worked in the tunnel during the day, at least, now that they had got so near the vault. At night no one would be in the bank, and they could work without fear of being heard. Asit was probable that a watch was kept over our movements, our prepara- tions for the capture of the burglars were deferred until after dark. During the afternoon we worked at our desks as usual, and left the building for our homes at the usual time, having re- ceived instructions from Axtell to re- port again at 8 o'cloecs. We were to come up the alley, which was always very dark, and quietly enter the rear room of the bank. * Meanwhile the president had seen the sheriff, who was to come to the bank with four deputies at 8 o'clock. When I cautiously stepped through the back door into the building a little before 8, I found these men already there. The other clerks came in promptly. Two men were sent to a room in the second story of a building across the s reet, where they could watch the adobe. It they saw any one enter the passage way, they were to notify us by drawing a match across the window and immediately blowing it out. Each of the clerks, beginning with the book- keeper, was to be stationed for a cer tain time near the vault door to listen for sounds from the tuunel, and to watch for the signal across the way. The rest of the party were to remain in the back room, ready to respond to any call. Thus the night was com- menced. The time dragged along slowly enough. We could only sit in silence. No sound had reached us from the tunnel, and no communica- tion had been made to us by the clerks in the banking room up to 11 o'clock. At that hour another man was to re- lieve the first watcher, and the ex- change was silently made. The baok- keeper had heard nothing below, and had seen no signal from the opposite side of the street. Again the time dragged. Nothing unusual was reported by the watcher. One o'clock came, and it was now my turn to relieve him. I took my place under the counter. After a brief con- sultation by Mr. Axtell and the sheriff, it was decided it was probable the rob- bers were at work in the tunnel, and if they were they would leave it at an early hour. The sheriff and two of his deputies took their stations outside, two of them going into the alley, and the other into the street in front, thus guarding both ends. At about 2 o'clock IT beard a distinet noise from under the floor near the vault door. It was a steady succession of strokes, as in digging, mingled with a slight sound of tools. Presently came a noise as though some heavy m:nutes, and told the receiving teller to attend to my window meantime. Then I slipped on my riding shoes, ran body was being lifted or forced. 1 crept to the front of the vault, and could catch the sounds very distinctly. They seemed to come from inside. The ns ~~ robbers were either in the vault, or j about to enter! Now was the to. net. The other end of the tunnel was guarded, and at this end, of course, there was no possibility of escape. 1 stepped back two or three paces, drew my re- volver, and fired three shots in quick succession through ti at the point at which 1 j the tunuel must terminate. There was only a slight chance of hitting any one in the tunnel, but the robbers in their fright wonld undoubt- edly rush for the other end, to find themselves confronted by the sheriit and his assistants. those in the rear room were hurrvine forward, 1 called to them to run to the adobe, We found the sheriii’ and his depn- ties on the alert, as they had heard my firing and waiting developments. The men who had been sia‘ioned across the way quickly came over. | explained as briefly as possible what had occurred, and, revolvers i we surrounded the adobe After waiting some minutes we be- came impatient, and the sherifl mined to enter, tima floor n > nae Aa HAR in hand, deter- Dark lante: procured, and the sherifi to follow him closely. We crowded mto the passage way, the sheritf at the head. When" door was reached lie flung itopen with- out a moment's hesitation, threw up his right hand with cocked revolver, while two deputies ‘mmediately behind him reached forward with dark lanterns, and flashed the light throughout the room. There was an instant of in- tense suspense. were Ye directed us Then the sheriff’ said quietly, “There’s not a sonl inside,” All burried iito the room. The trap door was down. There was no other door, w'ndow or opening of anv kind by which an escape might have been made. The robbers must be still in the tunnel. It was suggested that they had built a branch tunnel for es- caping if discovered ; but there seem- ed to be no place in the vicinity suita- ble for such an exit. The chances were that they were still inside, wait- ing, perhaps, an opportunity to make a rush through the trap door. We listened for a few minutes, but heard no sound. Then the sheriff stepped forward to the trap door, and quickly liftin> it, threw the rays of a dark lantern down the hole. As far as the light reached, nothing could be seen but the black walls of the tunnel. Then the sheriff leaned forward and shouted down : “Come up one at a time, and we won't hurt you !”’ There was no answer : we waited a little, and then he shouted as before, adding, not altogether politely, “This is the last chance you'll get. Don't make fools of yourselves!” The echo of his voice was the only response. In silence we waited about the tunnel’s mouth, but heard not the slightest indication that any one was inside. The sheriff threw down the door with angry impatience. What next ? How were we to capture them? Should we have to starve them out, or smoke them out ? We divided ourselves into watches, two men were to stand guard for one hour, while the others retired to the hank to snatch a little sleep; if possi- ble. In the meantime several police- men, having heard the firing, had come to the vicinity of the adobe. One of them stationed himself in the passage, and two more took their stands in the street and alley ready to spread the alarm it’ an escape was attempted. Be- fore leaving the watch to their duty we fastened the trap door down securely. From this time until 8.30 in the morning nothing occurred. The watchers were regularly relieved, and none of them had reported any signs of life in the tunnel. But as the bank’s business mast go on without in- terruption, it was necessary to open the vauit. There was less chance of the rob- bers trying to esgape that way than by the other end of the tunnel. When Listening to them working I hardly supposed that they had got into the vault. Besides, it was now broad day. the streets were full of people, and the hold cracksmen must know that we would be prepared for them. Half a dozen men gathered about the vault door, fully armed and ready for any emergency. As I was the one most familiar with the combi- nations on the vault doors, it was my duty to unlock them. I did aot relish the position of first target fora bullet from the inside, but mustered up my courage, said nothing, and went to work. The outer door I drew open without hesitation, the inner door was the one to be feared. When the bolts of the inner door had been thrown back I found that it scarcely could be moved, as the stone under it was raised more than before. At length three of the strongest in the | party managed to force it open, and the inside of the vault could be seen. No one was there. But the floor showed a startling condition of affairs. called in Mr. Axtell. There he heard about as bold a proposition as man ever made. One of the guards had volunteered to go down into the tun- nel! He was a deputy sheriff, a Mexican named Jose Charez, who, be- coming impatient that the robbers did not show themselves, determined to stir them up in their own quarters. He was a daring, reckless fellow, accustomed all his life to deeds of dar- ing. He lived on excitement, and was over restless when not on the trail of some horse thief or murderer. He knew the risk of going into the tun- nel, but said he had as good a chance as the robbers—as a matter of fact, in such "an encounter every advantage s on their side—and that was ali he wanted. The rest ot the men, brave though they were, shrngeed their shoulders, and declined underground wariare. Charez was to through the barrel. vault doors enter the tunnel After locking the again, those of us who could leave work went to the adobe house. The guards there had nothing toreport. We took the fastenings oft the trap door and lifted it. The Mex- {ican threw the light of a lantern down i the hole, i be seen, made ready his revolver, and | . 7 . > . quickly dropped through into the dark- remarked that no one was to ness, All of us trembled with excitement, and listened with painful intensity. [ Before we were aware what was taking place, we saw the Mexican reappear suddenly at the mouth of the hole,and heard four shots ring out in rapid sue- cession. Then the Mexican bounded up through the smoke, and pointing wildly to the floor near the hole, shouted : “1 shot one of em under there I" We waited for nothing further, but hurriedly puiled up the boards around the hole. The floor stood some dis- tance above the ground, and in this space was the body of a man lying motionless. We lifted him ont, and laid him carefully on the floor. He was already dead. Those of ns who were unaccustom- ed to death in so frightful a form were entirely unnerved by this sight; but the sherifl and his men did not forget even at such an time the business of the hour, and quickly searched under the tloor for other robbers. Finding no signs of more of them, they came up to hear the Mexican’s story. He said that he had taken a few steps forward into the tunnel, when the hole began to grow smaller and smaller so that to proceed he would have been compelled to go on hands and knees. Not bargaining for this style of attack he retreated, and was about to climb out of the barrel, when he noticed how the floor of the adobe was built above the ground. The light from above lighted up this space for a few feet all around, and there, crouch- ing in front of him, he saw the robber, and at once fired upon him. The robber hid evidently planned beforehand to crawl under this oor in case of danger, and await a chance of escaping. Thorough examination the adobe house under the flooring, but uo sign of any other robber was found. Then the trap was shut down again and guards placed as before. The time slipped on till 2 o'clock. Then we heard another fearless propo- sal. Four of the men volunteered to zo through the tunnel from end to end. They made scarcely any preparation for the expedition, simply taking a bull's eye lantern and making sure that their revolvers were in working order. Une after another dropped through the opening. They crouched low down as they crawled through, the head man holding the lantern as high up as be could reach. Thus, if they were fired on, the lantern wouid probably be aimed for, and the bullet would flv over them. We waited for them in the vault through several minutes of intense anx- tety. Then we gave a great shout as the head and shoulders of the first man appeared under the raised stone. We helped oue after another of the bold four through the opening up to daylight again. The men had met no one in the tun- nel, and had seen no branches or other means of escape. They were positive vo one was concealed inside. A fur- ther thorough examination of the tun- nel confirmed their statements, and it became almost certain that only one man had been at work. The theory that the plan and execn- tion of the crime were his only, was strengthened the day when he was buried, when a startling discovery was made. Some of the officers of the law with Mr. Axtell, had gone to take a look at the man to endeavor to identify him. Mr. Axtell had scarcely caught sight of the face before he exclaimed : “Why, that man is one of the stone I masons who built the vault !” And so he proved to be. We found that the man had left a widow, and hunted her np. She was severely The large stone in front of the safe | was raised up at one side nearly two feet. Tt was supported hy jack screws which had been used to force it up. [nn ten minutes move the robbers, it un- interrupted, would have heen in the vault. Unfortunately for them in their workings of the previous night they had accidentally displaced the stone that ran under the inner door, or their plot might not have heen discovered till too late to arrest it. i After a few minutes of surmise and speculation, Mr. Axtell stepped np to | the hole and shouted down the same proposition the sherifi’ had made at! the other end. There was no response whatever. He then directed me to | open the sate and proceed with the | of a Miss Warner. questioned, but professed . entire igno- | rance of her husband's plans, and seemed to be telling the truth. The officers and directors of the bank saw fit to reward me for my part in the occurrence with a splendid bicy- cle, which bore on its handle bar a small sitver plate with an inscription I “modestly refrain from repeati g. ATR —cc——— The First Wooden Clock. E. A. Fenn, in the Ailegan, Michi- can, Journal, says : “About the year 1800 there lived a sort of indolent. thriftless, unpromis- ing vounz man by the name of Eli Terry. He sought the hand and heart The Warners were business or the day as usual. . Two | solid old Puritan stock and despised men were left on guard in the vault, | laziness, but, notwithstanding all oppo- and the rest were stationed in the back room. All who knew of the situation were cautioned to keep it to themselves, and yery few ot our customers that morning knew what was going on un- der their feet. At about the rear room 10.30 one of the men in came to the door ant sition, thev were married. Eli had no visible means of support, but spent his time sitting on a stump or block, whittling out a circle he struck with an old compass or sawing ofl’ bits of wood from some old dead trees, and thus, day after day, his time was spent, and the general opinion was was made of ter of the appointee had become known | Episcopal Church, can recall that about I 50 vearsago she was at the point of death, , and to gratify her supposed last wish she "was taken to church.on a cot by her sermon was preached and the object of he was crazy. Want pressed so hard in the home that the wife, by urrent entreaty of friends, had sabont made up her mind to return to her pa- rents’ home, when the fruit: of Eli’ whittling and sawing materialized the first wooden clock ever made in America, and, I believe, in any coun- try. It was readily sold to a newghbor for #30 and paid for in pork, tour, po- tatoes, other family necessities, and a hop ited iy little money, with which he boucht tools to fa ite hiz work in further pros ecit of clock making, An other a: notirer was made that sold readily as soon as completed. Then foot lathes and small Ar saws { the e employed, ! e rapid and eagerly after, and Eli Terry began to accumuiste money. In the meantime te he had made application for letters patent upon his clock, and about 1802 or 1203 built a small shop and com- menced improving upon construction of machinery and tools, and the foundation for a vast fortune materialized in after his clock and vas made which Vers, Notwithstanding his unbounded be- nevolence he became very rich. He 1 t To1r . oe died about 184; re of 8) ve beloved and re sted by all who knew him, leaving a re family of grown up boys and a number of grandsons, all very wealthy, and all living in Ter- ryville, Conn., controlling nearly all the wealth of the place, which was in- vested in large manufactories for clocks and locks. It worthy of note that not one Terry is left in that region and all their interests and investments have scattered or gone into other hands. etm m—— In Praise of Two of Our Citizens. is The following from a Washington correspondent of the Philadelphia Re- cord contains very favorable mention of two of Beilefonte’s citizens: 1 asked a Johnstown emigre to-day how Adjutant General Hastings hap- pened in at Johnstown so quickly after the disaster, and he said: “General Hastings and his friend Major Spangler, the well-known Democrat and lawyer of Bellefonte, were looking at a coal pro- perty about fifty miles away on Friday two weeks ago. Hearing of the trouble at Johnstown, they drove over the mountains on Saturday morning so hastily that they did not stop to send word to Bellefonte that they were going. Mrs. Hastings did not know where her husband was until she began to see his name in the dispatches from Johnstown, and then she couldn’t get to him until Thursday of the following week, when she came driving over the mountains at the rate of six miles anhour to join him. She did splendid service, too, when she came. Hastings is the hero of the relief ( work. Spangler helped him nobly, per- forming the Commissary General until Colonel Leach arrived with the greatest efficiency. He richly deserved his ap- pointment as Assistant Commissary General. ‘General’ said Colonel Leach to Hastings, taking him aside at head- quarters one evening, “I think Spangler deserves to be Assistant Commissary General. There is a vacancy you know, and I think [ shall fill it with him.’ ‘That would be just right,” said Hastings; ‘it would suit me exactly.” “When shall I do it? asked Leach. ‘Now, said Hastings. ‘Major Spangler,’ said Qol- onel Leach in a tone which made every one listen. ‘Sir,’ sa'd Major Spangler. “You are hereby appointed,” continued Colonel Leach, ‘Assistant Commissary General, and I shall procure vour com- mission as soon as possible.’ “No wonder Spangler was speechless and everybody else was moved. Next to Hastings 1 think Adjutant General of | Ohio, Axline, deserves most credit. He! came right down on Saturday, and brought all the available tents of the Ohio troops down on Sunday. We could not have done without those tents, for we could get none elsewhere. And Axline took off’ his coat and worked too. He has asad little souvenir to take home with him. 1tis oneof the three marbles tight clasped in the fist of the little boy found dead in his dead mother’s embrace. On her other arm was her little girl, dead too, but holding tightly still her little doll baby. You could see justhow she snatched them up when she suddenly saw the dood coming,and how they tried to save their treasures, too.” ——————— Noble's Mistake. New York World In appointing the man Squires to a new post after his disgraceful conduct had Leen discovered Secretary Noble in- curred precisely the blame which he sought to aveid. He ought to have turn- ed the fellow out of the public service as a man utterly unworthy to be in it; but he feared that in that case the facts would become known and the administration be censured for having given office to so un- worthy « person. Accordingly he re- moved him from one office by appoint- ing him to another. The first appoint- ment might have been forgiven as one made in ignorance of the man’s character. For the second there can be no excuse. It was made after the disgraceful charac- and even because of his disgraceful char acter. Secretary Noble has made a mis- tuke. Perhaps he has also learned a les- son to the effect that it is safer to confess and correct an error than to coverit up in the hope of concealing it. eovaar—————cs se. i ——Squire Jesse R. Jones mentions Mrs. Goss, who resides some miles east of Clanton, Ala. as being over 90 veurs of age. He and Rev. Mr. Smith,of the relatives that she might hear her funeral preached before she died. The funeral it is still living. —- ” | —-—Some time ago when a gentleman ! of Bucksport, Me., was married, he took his bride on a visit to her people at Ells- worth. In the afternoon he had petted a little nephew and showed him his false teeth, with which the little fellow was | much amused. In the evening when company was assembled the conversa- ion lagged, and some one said: “What shall we donext?” Thelittle boy spoke | up and said: “Show ‘em your false teeth, Uncle All? : All Sovts of Paragraphs. —Paris Figaro prints a special edition in an office 500 fect up in the Eiffel tower. —Mary Fisher, a colqred girl, is vale- dictoriar of the eradualing class of the Atchison High Sehool, —dJ. F. Duffey, of Cumming, Ga. re- cently set a ben on 17 egos. She hateh- ed 13 chickens and left four egos 1n the nest, WU to relieve or epidem- suffering ip 1C8. — Human beings are still beinz sold in the famine-stricken distriets of China A child under 10 brings from a dollar to a dollar and a half. — A subscription bar is to be opened in Berlin, where for 3150 one can drink for a whole year, and where monthly subscriptions will be sold. —Of this year’s graduating class at Princeton 32 will, it is said, become law- vers, 21 ministers, 14 doetors, 15 busi- ness men and 2 newspaper men, —Beggary has been reduced to an art as well as a profession. In a recent case before‘the police an old man admitted that he had as many as 30 les in daily use. —The Chinese lack appreciation of the stage. As soon as a Celestial enters on the stagehe is deprived of citizenship and his children after him for four wen- erations, > —Mr. Joel Chandler Haris, an au- thority on fox hounds, bees and Jerseys, is feeding his herd on cotton seed lulls, and says the result in miik, butter and beef is amazing. —College journalism flourishes at Harvard, and its graduates or under- graduates also keep the daily newspapers of Boston, particularly ‘the Sunday papers, supplied with college news. —An English detective, after a search of four months, has found (in Sydney) a piece of silver plate stolen from a Lon- don house and which he was instructed to recover at any cost. —The coin and slot device has been applied to children’s savings banks. When once set for action a regulated number of coins must be dropped in the bank before it can be opened. —A company in New York is to manufacture sandwiches by the thou- sand and retail them throughout the city in liquor stores, offices and factories by means of peddlers. —1In one small lake in Cuba contain- ing about 200 acresan American recent- ly counted 107 alligators, all fat, con- tented and healthy, and living in hopes of annexation to the United States. —The total Indian population is less than 250,000. Of these 21,232 live in houses and 9,612 families are engaged in agriculture. And among these so-called savages there are 28,663 church members. —The proceedings of the Japanese parliament are reported verbatim by means of a stenographic system original in Japan. The characters are written in perpendicular rows from right to left. —-A Hindoo lecturer in England says that the British have degraded India and her people to the level of beasts, and that tens of thousands die yearly of starvation,andall reports are suppressed. —The greatest snuff-taking country in the world is France, though it shows a decline in the habit. In 1869 the con- sumption was 13,000,000 pounds, or seven ounces per head. Now it is five ounces. —The care a fox takes of her cubs can be seen from a list of provisions found together about an “earth.” Tt comprised 10 rabbits, 20 rats, 2 pheasants, 1 wild duek, 2 fowls, 1 snipe, 2 wood cocks, 32 moles: total, 71 head. —An American was arrested on the Austrian frontier for having in his lug- gage unmistakable dynamite bombs. On further investigation they proved to be cocoanuts, something that the Aus- trian authorities had never seen. —A San Francisco firm has built the lInrgest wine cellar in the world. It is capable of holding 3,000,000 gallons of wine. Its cost was $250,000. This is one indication of the rapid growth of wine production on the Pacific coast. —Mrs J. W. Cureton, of Trenton, Ga., caught one of the largest eels that was ever caught in Georgia one day last week. It was five feet long and estima- ted to weigh about 75 pounds. It took one bushel of bran to stuff its hide. ——A Kentucky man who was dying alone left his will in lead pencil on the head of a whisky barrel, and it is held to be valid. The only thing he left, however, was a gallon of whisky in the barrel, and that isn’t worth fighting over. — Who would believe that the once derided velocipede would within a few vears give birth to more than 75,000 bicycles, and that the League of Amer- ican Wheelmen counts alone 12,000 members, 10,000 of whom live in New York and the surrounding suburb. —A Georgia farmer prevents his cows from jumping a fence by cutting off their lower eyelashes—making them think the tence is three times as high as it really is. If you cut the upper lashes a reverse illusion will result, he says. — Great Britain counts on soon hav- ing the largest dynamo in the world. It is being made for the new electric light works at Deptford. The shaft of the machine will be turnad out of a block of steel weighing 75 tons, which has just been cast in Glasgow. —For several years there was a stand- ing offer of $10 for a partridge’s nest containing more than 12 eggs, the re- cords at theSmithsonian institution giv- ling that as the greatest number of eras of that species to a nest. —S. P. Jeffords, of Waycross, Ga., tells of a peculiar reptile discovered by one of his sons. It was a snake about six feet long, jet black, and having two horns. The horns were sbout two or three in length, and crooked so that the tips pointed toward each other. When it crawled its head was raised at least a foot from the ground. and the horns would keep moving, almost touching to- gother.