A MARYLAND ESTATE. How the Negroes Were Provided for --Their Allowance of Food and Clothing. Fred Douglass, in his autobiography, thus describes the management of a Maryland estate, in the times of slavery : “The men ana the women Col. Lloyd's farm received monthly allowance of food ei of pickled pork or their 29 fish. The pork was often t nted 1 the fish was of the poorest quality herrings —which wonld bring very little if offered for le northern market. J air pork or fish they had onel ited, of which 1 to feed } pound of sal the entire monthl grown slave, working open from every day in the and living quart 1¢ 81 The vearly f two slaves as hit 1 ounds went On t an meal, unb ial field on i Ff Of § sisted of the coar two pairs of and or One one pair apparel eo FS a fans to cool alabaster COACHES Wi ph tons, bal silver-mounte fine horses.” Co : i lmes Wf i Tk i A Scbhmarine Balloon. vatory. or will sink people to the f the Mediterranean shore waters they njoy the which will re natural aquaria there to be seen. It is a bal Joon of steel, with three compartments one for the actuating me hanism and heating bladder, one fo and one for the passengers, to the num- ber of eight. There are glass windows for looking ont at the fishes, shells and weeds, and the height of the balloon in the water is regulated at will by means of a collapsible bladder. A telephone connects the balloon, which 1s captive and can not float away, with the shore or a boat above. r the captain, Cunning Conjurers, | § [Chicago Times) The performances by the Davenport brothers and other spirits are clamsy compared with the acts of the far north- west Indians. The conjurors are legion that will permit themselves to be bound, not merely hand and foot, but the whole body swathed with thongs, withes, ropes and rawhides, and after ward tied up in a net, and then release themselves almost instantly on being placed in a little “medicine lodge” of skins, constructed for the purpose, the bonds being ti through an opening in the top, w ithout a knot being apparently disturbed. irown out The Coming Trotter (New York Tribune. ] When the world sees a trotter eover a mile in one minute and forty seconds, a feat pccomplished by more than one thoroughbred, it will see a wholly new type, so different from the present ani mul that the theory of evolution will never stretch far enough to cover the prodigy. — A Fortune Waits, A fortune awaits the man who will in vent a penholder that you can't stick into the muecilago-bottle, and a muecilage brush that won't go into the inkstand. There is a man in New York who manufactures diamonds for actresses ta Jose, They are sold at so much a quart. Louise, Republican} Courngeous Frincess Montreal Cor. SBeranton (Pa Her roval highness is very fond of yunshine, and the early morning visitor is welcomed by flinging back the curtains ‘the first thing of the day.” Every morning before breakfast the princess takes a walk of three miles over the state of the government house and the ond beyond, walking briskly over the snow in winter, aided by a cane and ac sompanied by a favorite dog. She is 1d of skete and han other accomplishments, but she 18 the Germans call a no ybhle house the kitehe [i overy for the did not at her lady who wet hing painting day ome’ yore used to the expression of supreme 1 wills, Like IINCESS 18 wotio the ered, and the se to thin! een in tl ODO, vants Lemp were taken iil of r defect Uraing The Races of Corn. Raisins Better than Wine, experience testime wo know of none better from medical and commend thoughtful con sideration of : : habit of resorting to *' thy stomach's sake.” v my Source we signs of Longevity Chieago Herald Lord Bacon, g« obsery nerally regarded as the keenest er and profound at thinker who has appeared an this planet, wrote much on longevity. His signs of short life are quick growth, fair, soft skin, soft, fine hair, early cor pulence, large head, short neck, small mouth, fat ear, brittle, separated teeth Some of his signs of long life are slow growth, hard, coarse hair, rough, freckled skin, deep furrows in the fore- head, firm flesh with veins lving high, wide nostrils, large mouth, hard, gristly oar, strong, contignous teeth He adds that early gray hair is not significant, the livers having turned gray in early life. some of longest But with Dignity. { wo Tribune, | has lately joined the militia, practicing in Lis shop: “Right, left, right, left. Four paces to the rear, march !”-—{alls down trap door into the cellar, Groeer's wife, anxiously: “0, Jim, are yon hart?” Grocer, savagely, but with dignity: “Go away, woman, what do you know about war?” so ————— Mormon Growth, [Chtieago Herald, ) According to Mormon figures, in the last six months 781 Mormons have died, 2,300 Mormon children have besa born, and the Utah membership numbers 127.264, distributed in 25,000 families, The most astounding item is the num ber of new members, 48,040, an increase of 20 per cent. Lane ‘ 1 (roc er, Wao Fuller: Chose such pleasures ns ro create much and cont little, “OLD HICKORY'S'' FARWELL. Andrew Jackson's Last Hours in the White House. [Joaquin Miller. } How many strange, old-new ne finds down here among these an- sient people! And how curious relies of days “before the war, sah.” In the last month of President Jack- administration, he called voung artist, whom 1 am not to name prow, to stories many BON 8 in a itted 1s YOUung Del do a miniature of leceased on "hi wile Ivory but 19 and the Lin oldie: Jalan 18 to have taken from the letter pre served Jackson's I'he admin artist work on » hero and lool aoncern 1 He roon general's vas the one on the 1 at the head of the artist—now cons Wor: wtely Ty Pha ind eminent in surrounding him. ¢ xl on his own hoofs a bed of M arshal $ Gry 3 Non in th Neil roses; in was the customary lemon sted in his small tal He was pr moun 5 anvthir i 1 , was duals the alth of the was duly dn champag: ng in A Perpetunl Cloek. {Chicago Time uales oa brake that st GY 4 thins to start ar ins gone dowy a J i the clock was 1 y, after having nine consecutive it iree Win tile. ne been in notion for months, Queer Oil Springs, New York Sun. } “Venezuela has boiling oil springs, California has got an oil w a drop of oil 1 the dark of and Wyom has oil wells tanks, and Capt. Jared county, in the He has just re- yvoars tour of inves- tigation of alleged oil fields in Mouth America, on the Pacific coast, and in other loecalitios, springy that BOM. own sce ‘em all” Ven ae Aster honse rotunda The Right of Conquest, {Arkansaw Traveler.) “Why do yon make such a fare in taking that medicine #7 asked a wife of her husband. “Yota pour it down Tommy." “Yes, because I an stronger than Tommy, HM Tommy were strevgor than 1, he would doubgless pour it dvwn 5 we.” “ABBY CRIED AND JACK CRIED’ How a Carrier Boy Fell In Love with 8 Little Whitehead, Detroit Free Press. It has been going on for a Jack fh Currier and his ciren soeott year pas for one of the daili takes One 11 3 in a house day Jast baby crowed at him from an open on that street, and Jack tossed into the hi ic next VAR Wil g. § dra natic a degre On the Wrong Foot. (Norwalk Hour) A little Norwalk boy got a sliver in a motion to poultice the wonnd, made by his mother and seconded hia foot, and by his was carried in spite of his objections. He kicked creamed, and protested that he wonld submit to any such indignity, but the maj against him was two to one. and the poultice was made ready It was arranged that the grandmother should apply the po iltice while the pa- tient's mother stood stick with authority and 1 apply that alsof he made of resistance When all was ready the youngster was placed on the bed and operations be- gan. As the hot poultice touched the boy's foot, he opens « his month to say something, but his mother, with the stick, awed him into silences, gain the boy strove to make himself heard, and again the upraised stick warned him to be quiet. In a few short min | utes the poultice was firmly in place, and the boy was tacked up in bed, there to remains until the medicine had done ita work, As the urchins tormentors | moved away, a shrill, small voice from | under the vedelothes “You've dot it on the wrong foooti” grandmother, ¥ Hos over the least show American Ways, {Chioago Tribune | London is fast adopting American manners. There are now seven hotels, each to contain 1.000 bedrooms, in course of construction in that eity. Many rith London people prefer boards DUEL WITH A SHARK. A Hanaks Kills no Shark ina Hand. to-Hand Encounter. Faquirer,) d to "San Francisco Cor Fyory soul on board erowds sides 4 tnens the duel. It to be to the d {Ine ot the combat The avid anis How Pretec baked rap I'he regulation steamn pret (ig word pretzel nea that it after being boiled backed and placed in a box, is dri The soft predzel is not a « able COMMOGIEY Indeed, it be inedible after two or three days the hard steam: pretzel is as impen able hard-tack, and a delicas even at the mature age of six montl ms made of eras steam. as in is. Marvvicd for Keeps, {Ts The skipper of a coal Baltimore Ohio canal cided after mature delibera earefnl consideration, to cook who iad been a tried and servant to him for quite a his perilous tr Ips on the storm-lashe canal. So he spoke “to bor about ti matter one day, and after securing | coy consent, he ordered the boat tie up at a small town, and, being a pr tical skipper, skipped up street alt The nuptial knot was tied], the parson beaten down to a lar and a hall for his fee, and the: canal boatman said: “Well, Melindy, we are married far keeps, now. Weare hitched far life, and must pall together. Pm a littla Jorb-handed to-day, and ag that lead mule has got saddle galls on his back you jist take the tow path, and lead him down to Harper's erry, an’ I'll steer, an’ kinder ruminate on some plan to give you work on the boat without going ashore in the mad. I've got a power ful wight more respect for you now, that youre my wife,” sas Niftings) boat Ie on rithy a number jr “Om. By the Mississippi overflow of last vear Louisiana claims to have been damaged to the extent of $60,000,000, A possession of honesty by somo peos ple makes us think of a blacksmith with a white wlk apron on. + Fapensive Mateh Mafes, fHhonton Budget} thor Tif« OG any sived 1 the Thm Josh aid of 0 every lin b intricate engravin his fact iwonught to the attention of th depart ment not long ago. The statutes forbid any ‘3 i imitation of ¢ currency of the country for the pu poses of advertisement. ’ generally understood. brewer ard 1% A New recently devised a business in the shape of a plate with sev. eral bills of different denominations lying upon the plate, being held down by a gold and a silver coin. He had emploved regular bills as the X and the result is What portions of y the careless piling They were re- hography and then : originals, Tha plates were al zed, and the brewer notified that he was a violator of the law, although hig intent was innocent This discovery has sel the officials to thinking. With the right kind of paper any skillfal photo-livhographer could get up millions in & very short time. To guard against the danger and to provide means of detecting such counterfeits arg as yel wn oived problems, b H 1 Pamping Out the Nea. The Dutch at one time thought of sumping ont the Zuyder Zee, and asked Mr. Bookwalter, of Ohio, for an esti. mate for turbine wheels to be worked by the tide. They wanted 100 tare bines, which wonld bave cost $2,000 each. The work may vet be done. The total oulflow of all the mineral waters of Francoe is estimated at 10,08 gallons per minute.