————ot————— SOMEWHAT STRANGE. ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS OF EVERY-DAY LIFE. Queer Episodes and Thrilling Adven- ~ tures Which Show that Truth Is Stranger than Fiction. Tue Kansas “wolf-drive' isa great in- stitution, for it satisfies the natural eraving of man to kill something without exposing himself to danger, und it is therefore exceedingly popular. In the and Crawford wolves and foxes, mnltiply alarmingly fast, have been boldness and ferocity, The farmers have risen up and organized for the pur- footed raiders. engage in the wolf-drive, and they beat over a tract ten miles square. The affair discipline. in turn picks out his staff and battalion and company commanders, for starting isa fusillade of shots fired by the leaders of cach squad. intervals of about fifty foet. are supposed to move one mile each half hour. Every man has a horn or a drum, and his instructions are to make as much noise as he can. Wolves are not to be centre. They may be clubbed into n run if necessary. Ata distance of one mile from the contro the report of a can- non announces that the battle is about to begin, and the forces are aligned and put in readiness. Only such of the hunters as are designated by the general carry firearms; the others are armed with clubs to prevent the beasts from escaping. A great number of wolves are often rounded up, and when the word is given they are picked off by the appointed i shooters. While the *‘drive” casion for a good deal of fun, the business of the day, and marksmen attend to this. sharp- is the oc tHireer 3a killing is the best A story of heroism is told among the usually prosaic anwouncements of the London Gazette inexplanat . vices for which the Queen has conferred ' the decoration of the Albert medal of the second George Hoar, boatman of the Tynemouth Coastguard Station On the occasion of the wreck of the schooner Peggy during a sever with a very heavy after had the means of the rocket apparatus, tain of the Peggy inf officer of the coastguard that another man still on board the w disabled state, he fal ion of the ser- 1 Ciiss on gale son, four Hw been rescued from reck inn n out ol the rigging deck of the in attempting to ge’ into the bree buoy. (reorge Hour immediately volun teered to go off to the wreck and bring the man on shore and hauled : the wreck, a one and fifty yards, face of a tremendous gale from southeast. He found on arriving at th vessel that he could not the m owing to the has on #4 fourteen feet above having fall 3 t oa to vessel ches } Wis off t é distance of hundre through the heavy seq reach veer havi cured he deck (whee thas man lay helpless and in an unconscious state’. He then signaled to be haul shore again, to confer h the « cer; shortly afterward ho hauled hing hawser was cased so as to allow breeches buoy to deck. As the man ioss George Hoar. with the man round the body with both hands by his coat collar, and this manner the two men hauled on shore, the sea at times wash- ing completely over them. wil again off, and on reachin wk the in on Hm reach man were Tur Juniata Valley Sentinel says that on one of the cold mornings during the cold spell a large hawk pounced upon one of Benjamin Haller's tame ducks that at the time were in a pool of fresh, unfrozen water in the canal bed a short distance beyond the * third lock’ at Ma cedonia, Penn. The hawk fastened its claws around the neck of the fowl next to its body, but the duck was in deep water, and. true to its nature, it ducked and drew the hawk with it under the water. Again the duck dove, which was too much for his bawkship. The hawk released its hold on the duck and with The weather was cold and froze the feathers of the hawk together so that it ness of the capture and escaps game be. tween the hawk and duck, and when it was all over he took a hand at the game feather's being so frozen together that it could not fly away. The bird meas. ured 3 feet 6 inches from the tip of one wing to the tip of the other wing. Auvriovon Alfonso, the late King of Spain, died six years ago, his body is still unburird. Clothed only in a simple linen garment, the corpse rests ou a slab of rock near a running stream, in a cavern of the mountain on which the Es. from Madrid. There the body is des. tined to r main until it becomes natur- ally mummified; then it wiil bo reverent. ly placed in the jasper vault ander the Charles V., in niches. No body is placed in this vaalt until all moisture ated—until it is ns dry nas a mummy. ears before it was sofficiently dry to removed to the Escurial jasper vault, Ture story of a capture of hibernating comes from the State of Washing. ton. Itis related by two citizens of Skipanon who saw the beasts in eaptiv- ity: Their owners said that in cutting down one of the giant spruce-trees con- mon to that region, he discovered that one part of it was hollow, and, looking into the cavity, he made out threo slum- g bears. Thereupon he nailed “‘slabs”’ of wood across the hole, and sawed off from the main trunk the section of tree in which the bears were housed. ‘This he started down the mountain-side in the usual fashion, and the novel cage and its contents arrived safoly at the bottom. The bears, which ure in a state of semi-torpor are now on exhibition. Mur. Axastasio Reseavx, a French woman, has died at the age, it is sald, of one hundred and eighteen years, near Kischenau, or Kicheney, a town of Bessarabia. The venerable dame, who had so long weathered the world and the climate of Russia, had been for many years Superintendent of a School for the the Daughters of the Nobi ity, retired with a pension from her position at the of ninety-two. She had entered the school as a teacher when it was founded during the reign of Alexander I, For the pust twenty-six years Mme. Reseaux was in a home for the aged, and enjoved excellent health despite her advanced and exceplional ange. A vavors English beauty, Lady Lon- | donderry, has a peculiar and successful system for keeping her youthful fresh. Although she is perfectly well she lies in bod one day in ten, sleeping in | the morning of this day of rast until she wakons naturally. After a hot bath and a light bronkfast she goes back to bed and rests quietly in a darkened room un- til 6 o'clock, when she dresses in a poig- noir, dines in her room, and sits nbout idly until 10 o'clock, when she goes to | bed again. No social event is considered of sufficient importance tocanse the lady to give up this periodical retirement from the hurry and excitement of modern liv. ing. W. A. Horkixg, while walking in town ono day recently, found the snow filled with myriads of small searlet worms. Sevoral acres were covered with them, and they were so numerous they gave the snow a erimson tinge, Hopkins brought a number of the worms to North Adans. The wrigglers about three.cighths of an inch long and as bril- The snow fall, Ness, of Blackinton, Mass., the woods above the were liant in color as cochineal. were found after a brisk it is thought to have baen natural phenomena known as a blood. storm Worms and one of those Tue little daughter af Rev. Mr. Hanis of the Methodist Episcopal Church, at Cattlettsburg, Ky., died a short timo ago of spinal meningitis, A series of meetings had been in in which the little girl, en age, had been taking active part. The night her death told the church that she had been gre atly blessed during the meeting little girl told her mother that sl ve o'clock. The litt sick, ond at 12:30 o'clock died. This the thi giving the Tn on top of a mounts pastor progress, sey voars of betore shoe Next morning the 1 would die at tw le ono took rd child that has died in parents f i perched from mE is in Missouri a lake. 1n, its suriace ot} to 106) feet be vel of the earth OW LHe ie rrounding it fed by no surface stream untouched by the wind, dead as the Sea wom. There is no point of equa flow vot it has rioddiond ri of thirty feet Over hich is in no wav affected by the atmo the adja t may rain for weeks in Webster or spheric conditions in country and the return of fair il's lake at I yv reach its highest point racted drouth. woenther wil its lowest yi Hi, 1, aur Pact f Montana ie of th Lie OL She four-in-hit through the strects and parks of Chicas at the World's Fair. A Mr. fn of Bozeman, Mont which will drive a hirty elk, The elk are ol ‘ormick i , park on his property at very fine specimons will establish a game Fort Custer and | will train the elk for driving. “TresLep to death” presses the height of humorous effect, but it one of those strange savings that some. imes tarn oat to be grimly expressive of a sober {act. Henning Peterson, a tailor of Fort Do lge, is likely to die literally of being tickled to death. Ilo was very much amused at a comic songz ho heard a few days ago, and he Inughed + ery hoarti- ly. his laughter became uncon trollable, and at the end of an hour he was so completely exhausted that he be. came insensible His laughing did not resemble hysterics. him wero vain, and at last re portsit was thought he would die, 1 UEURIY ox 18 Soon beon performed at Washington, D. C., by Surgeon-General Hammond. Two i pieces of bone. each about two and a half inches long by one inch wide, were taken from the head of an imbecile, Dr. Hammond holds that the man's imbecil- ity is due to the fact that the brain is too { large for its receptacle, and that by giv. ing it room for expansion reason may be | restored. Some time must elapse before ‘the result will be manifest, bat so far the operation has been successful, and the patient is doing well. The doctor is very hopeful of success. A ranry of hunters in Colorado killed | three mountain lions recently in a new, improved, and comparatively =afe way. Their dogs drove the lions under a lodge ' of rock and kept them there while the hunters dug down into the eave from i above. When they had an opening to where the lions were a rifle was pushed | through. The muzzle was gripped sav. | agely in the jaws of one of the lions and the gun was discharged. The other two ! lions grabbed the ritte in turn us it was ! withdrawn and poked in again, and each was killed by bullets through the head. | A nerineo farmer named Babeook, of { Roborough, England, killed his eat, and, | having skinned it, cut off its head, tail {and feet, sold it to a neighbor named | Isnno ns a rabbit for sixpence, Isaao had the animal cooked and he and his family partook of it. On subsequently being to'd that it was a cat, Isaac and his wife became ill, as he said, from the thought of it. He charged Biboook with obtaining the sixpence under false pre- tense, but the magistrate dism the caso, Exarxkens of railrond trains in Texas and most of the Western States carry revolvers, and often rifles, in the cab, for various contingencies that might arise, They amuse themselves by shooting at tolegraph poles or any other marks while runuiug at full speed, and attain a won. derful skill in markmanship. A few days ago an engineasr on the Denver and Rio locomotive, Mountain, Nov., from what the Coroner's {jury facetiously termed “alcoholic sue. | cos.” { not stand, Billings made a wager as to { the amount of whiskey he could stand. He immediately tossed off four beer | glasses full of the fiery liquid and fell | helplons to tho floor. He died a fow | minutes afterward, | Tuenre is an Indian justice of the | peace in Stockton, Califernia. His name is Charles Light, and within a few years ho has not only learned English, but taken a coarse in a business college, studied law, boen admitted to the bar, iand been elected to office. He has al ready gained some fame as a political orator. He is only in his thirty third year, | LORE ABOUT HORNS. | Queer Facts About These Animal Ap- pendages, “Tteore are a good many queer things to be told about horns,” said Osteologist Lucas to a Washington Star writer, “Take the horn of the rhinocerous, for It is nothing more than n pro tuberance composed of agglutinated hair. You cut it in two, and examining its structure under the microscope, you { find that it is made up entirely of little | {1 course example, tubes resembling haic tubes. thuse tubes are not themselves hairs, but the structure is the same, The horns of African rhinoceros sometimes grow to the length of four feet. From them the Dutch Boers make ramrods and other You may remember that the used by Umslopogans articles, handle of the ax in ‘Allan Quartermain’ was a rhinoceros horn. In old times rhinoceros horns were employed for drinking cups by royal personages, the notion being that poison put into them would show itself by bub- There mav have been some truth the acids and they bling in the idea, inasmuch ancient would ns FIR ! poisons wero decompose the hb ray material very quickly Visevoeral species of GOR TOSE, NOW { ' extinct and only found in a fossil sed 10 exist winch hind i The Toad anime, n= meaning 15 rather a uisnom two hort Several HRY pair i Many of Add enormous ix sw as the tricerato] vig horn over eas Bye na on little Of 118 nos : inocoerns, gigantic mn epoch, had thre mi their he ipported pairs of pr nds which are be horns, However f which hom is largels animal ure 0 comy quickly decoys, being of gelatine and othe that these appendages the are found found absent when ossil bones bensts which had them some fishes have horns wh length Fhe ho » the camer has a single horn attached to its skall, springing from a CArfiininous OAse nnd grow Sam It is re true horn. ing upward, ally 8 mdified feat Liz commonly provided with J] Iie nty of re pliles have horns Aras them. There are chameleons with three horns, like the ancient triceratops Horned toads have a sort of crest of four horns on the back of their heads. Thero is a small African snake which has two horus. No horned tortoises now exist, but a fossil specimen was found a while ago on Lord Howe's Island in the south. ern Pacific which had four horns on its and resembled a cross between a horned toad and a snapping turtle. Doubtless you have often heard of hu. man beings with horns. Such append. agos in their case are abnormal develop. bone.” Bre vers crest ments of Vermont maple sugar has an enviable reputation and the management of the Vermont sugar market is therefore of interest. The subject of sugar making is considered in a bulletin from the Ver. mont station. From this it is learned that an accurate thermometer is the best guide as to the handling of syrup in the pan. Fresh sap boils at 213 Fopecoe, but, as it grows thicker, the temperature | must rise to 240 degrees, or even 245 do- | grees. Pure syrup at 230 degrees tests cighty degrees, and at 2053 degrees it | would be ninety degrees, a degree be- | ing a per cont. of sugar. {| The syrup naturally contains mineral | matter, and, toward tho close of the sou. | son, some glucose. At the beginning of | the season the impurities are one-sis- teenth the whole amount of sugar and | these may increase, until the last run | contains thirty per cont. The more the | impuritios the higher the tomperataie of | boiling point. The last run cannot be | made into a sogar testing eighty degrees, and ninety degroo sugar can be made lonly from the runs of the first half of ! the season. [New York World, —————————— ————— The Alaska Census, Fifteon limber jawed natives live in Abgomekhelanaghamute, and eighteen told the enutherators in their own sweet way, that Chekiohtoleghaghamuto was their home. Kemnachananagamute is a settlement somewhat romarkabie for having more inhabitants than there aro letters in its name, while Kochlogtopag- amute boasts twenty residents and therefore enjoys the same proud distine. tion. The natives break the name of Nunavoknakchlugugamute in the middle, not that itisa word, as things go in nak, but drow aut is aweotnoss o little longer, In lonogamute nineteen ohiniren of the soil have their bout twice as man abiding place, and a are — or less proud to oall Yokokakat Leader, their home. [Cleveland FOR THE LADILS, IRIE LACK 18 POPULAR. A great deal of Irish luce is worn just | aranged in a fun about the neck and | For | i None is put on the sleeve, however. over the figure. The effect is very ar. New York World. CIEPONE FOR YARIOUR USER, The handsome crepons of the season for choice evening toilets, They are in | There ive, that make art toilets They aro softly charming tea bridesmaids’ Cronons very and charming the bocause crinkled dresses, fail so und A silk foundation skirt greatly improves the appearance of the dress, but it 1s by no means essential These erepons do not soil quickly, nor { do they show aggressively any slight Ar upon their surface. Pretty ribbous to match the color of the floral pattern, ndd sleeves of silk to corre. are alse effective adjuncts, but ost. spond are entirely optional. {Chicago bib or napkin is often not sufliciont to protect the dress of a child if the child has to perform at the ng the : CON The lar nt meal times, especially SOMo i in butter tact w est and mos a plate or se rvi “ Ys SUS He, i ites er from the the t orderly cannot always pre. Mid ith the food, which even neat- vont * i { 11 lanrad abro Fhe « 1-31 Bionoed, ong sieved aprot iis this respect, and while ti sant ves their I ADTOus ough Artin ¥ ns artisiid 1% iL 3TH and no sled dresans Hiers, i on the held yiRENiE af two Yan riors ol French wor $ arged across ks and fell { § ww wy Fort iil Ot i Wissen Tors in The Amasz aglit to seorn danger and ins of Dahomey are t to know no pain which form a part of their discipline any i's According to Major Ellis, thes sorambio over he aps of thorny brushwo vl as high as a house when they are storming an im- aginary town. and the first bloody hero ine to reach the other side is handsomely rewarded by the king Fhe military maneuyres ara but chil thing piay women PEST FOR DRESSER, The question »f how much money New York society women spend annually for dresses and whether they wear costly gowns more than once induced me so ask the best known man dressmaker in this city and London what he hat to say on the subject, writes Foster Coates. He told me some interosting facts “The richest people, as a rule,” he said, “are more economical in dress than those in moderate circumstances. The ber gowns made over for her children. She pays Often sho wonrs the same dress half a dozen times, but not at notable royal functions. Her dresses, all told, oost over 20,000 a yoar, possibly £30,000. This does not include laca-trimmed dresses, “Queen Victoria 1 the most economical of tho royal family. aud from year to style. Lady Dudley isa splendid second to the Queen. “In New York the most expensively dressed women are not the very richest. When Edith Kingdon was an actress she onred less for expenses than now, Then sho would order a dress and never ask the price, but now as Mrs. George Gould she always asks the price, and often re. marks that because she is Mrs. Gould she does not wish to pay any more fora dress than the regular price. Ada Rehan is more liberal and seems to care loss for expenses than wany ladies whose hus- bands are rated as worth millions. Mrs, Astor is not extravagant at all in dress. Mrs. Coleman Drayton and many others matter of dresses. Tho average society woman of wealth never spends over £5,000 a year in drosses, for very Nuun that they woar onch dress many ros, “ Ball dresses nro the cheapest, and altho~gh usually the most frail, they are often worn four times, The telle skirt is changed for oanch ball, but the skirt remains the Reception dresses cost more than ball drossos and are used many times by simply : part of the trimming, Even wedding dresses were oocasionally used again for grand occasions. All the big prices re. puted to be paid for dresses are largely fictitious and never deceive knowing The handsomest velvet dress that could be devised could not cost over $250, und a cloth dress is worth only $150 at the highest price. Old lances or some. thing exponsivo in trimming might make the whole $100 or $200 would go a long ways toward getting the finest kind of material for dresses, A woman whe spends £15,000 a year on dresses alone is more liberal than many roval domes.” I closed the conversation by asking him what finally became of the fine dresses of the rich. He said that had His guess was poor relations, {New York Mail and Es- press, VASHION XOTES, Enamelled ribbons gathered into scttes are used as lace-pins, Velvet girdles are very fashionable for evening dress worn by voung girls. Plaid gingbams made up with ribbon sashes will be popular styles for misses, Narrow bracelets of solid gold or silver have succeeded to the bangle bracelets and only one is worn Riorm kings and bright finished rubber boots with square tops for bovs are meet ing with a large sale, (sreat vogue has bean given thi son to little hoart-shape d lockets. are worn on fine chains 4 . y rold and heart jewelry suver favor the high school girls weart is usually worn impaled on a fsimnony have a fancy uous pi % who muking their foot Fo ’ bunch if Vio els SOme women Consnid é or forget-me-nots or full-blown rose the too, instead of a roscite ry *1 Swallow-tng i bie, and the tails are or er ang jonrer F'kev are becon « Bien Ger women, snag ard . ¢ siiluT- isteon As to IMBKCS Are Wii is on boots, | Well Ooniy i i eRRnyed nies formed and Pointed corsag i are therefore ai to cmbon bow jroint Hest dis p18 ad 100 large. ribbon strings «1 and the ten those of vels round hats to the the on i faahiion of tvis oid fashion of (ving { the dress waist, nowest thing in cloaks is the loose. THhiICH © It is worn , sack.shaped coat Hes in sth nari ngth q re le hat in London by women who lead procession in fashionable cir § fall, ana les it may reach us another unless it is hurled out. black silk just fin Jot is still very much us d on silks. A rich black faille ished for a reception dress has © crossed bodice, pointed back front, a ery rich trimming of cut jet edge. the in front, and borders basque, which also has a jet fringe and and t Cross pieces The Freoach slipper of patent leather, large silver buckle and high red heel in. dicates a return to the style of 100 yoars ago. Itixin high favor just now, dis. | puting its hold of the popular fancy with {the “skeleton slipper, designed to dis. i play the elaborate hosiery now the fash. { jon. A novel feature in the latest equestri- enne dress is the black silk skirt. It is loose and comfortable and gives the appearance of a jersey fit. The front is einborately embroidered. Only the vest front shows with the loosely fitting zounve jacket which accompanies the cos. tame, but the whole effect is decidedly picturesque. Curiosities from Mounds, Hundreds of skeletons, many of them | wearing copper masks, are among the curiosities that have been obtained from a group of ancient mounds near Chili- cothe, Ohio, forming the most remark: able find of antiguities ever made in this country. Notso much on account of their value and beauty as for the im mense quantity have the treasures excited | astonishment, demonstrating the exist. lence in form r times of a great aborgi- | nal population in that vicinity. Among | them arc pearls, not merely by scores and hundreds, but by hundreds of thou. sands dozens of them as big as English | walnuts, and fit for crown jewels, were | they not spoiled by decay and blackened | hy fire, The Boss Snake Story. A farmer of Marion County says he has a snake which swallowed an eight. day clock in August, 1887. Until the clock run down it strack regular and its ticking could be heard. short time ago the farmer found some eggs which had been deposited in a hole by the rep. tile, and on breaking them open found that each contained an opon-face watch in first-class ranning order. He sold the watches at a big profit and has now given the snake a post auger, in the hope that it will produce sufficient cork-screws to ennble him to start a wholesale drug store. —{ Dubuque (lowa) Ledger. ———————— HS, ALL'S PAIR, i Io ay tien hat n ’ com Miss Boauti has? : Rival Bello You.I don't see how she FOR THE YOUNG FOLKS, LITTLE SUT PEOFLE, 1d Mrs. Chestnut once lived ina bur ™ Vadded and lined with the softest of fur, Juck Frost split it wide with his keen silver knife, And tumbled her out at the rizsk of her life. Here is Don Almond, a grandee from Npain Some raisins from Malaga came in his trnin, He had leaner When ‘ i ' Philopena’ in twin brother a shade or two both come together we shout, Little Miss Peanut, from North Carolina. She's nut 'ristocratic, but nuts is a ahier, ho s is roasted and burnt to & »ometin Miss 4 Huzelnut, in her best bon. Is ivel ‘ § . & lively enough mit in a sonnet ; R £ | Aud young Mr. Filbert has journeyed from Kent, k her to soon after marry him 1 Hickory, look at him well: named tor him, so I've Lim, he KROMOC a hard nut to ‘hineapin, mod ext and neat, isn’t she sweet? eal ’ as a little boy's Mise chatier of Salt Lake Herald, EBACE. ¢ in Chicago, for riding on hich he has well “Th hind feet the collar 1. a0H id to be a fondness a rian horse, s remarkably 0 with his wr where ont 1eet, mount BEMAT , € one ahead of the : Hits in narrow ridge ws clatcehed In horse aud hero- p among I's heroes, ull honor shou be given. { %% ol vO them m we call the up example of this cla the person of Miss Norwich, England. is only fifteen vears old, testimonial Society at Lon- hat would have } years. ang found in Marion Bes eriy, of his little lady TKS is has already won a he Roval Humane 3 act of heroism it to ong older nw fol- lad in near DOTS LTe, of circumstan honas Cross, fn was bathing (werstrand, 1S, 4% many n 1 bivams am 3 ond hi resome disposition, oot bevond his Miss Beverly, who was in bath. the youth s danger and promptly swam to his rescue. d him as he for it the same time, saw sinking | difficulty Her brought to the was ashore and saved his life. was i 1 # Instead of a medal, however, the littlo miss was given a band- some vellum album, it being the custom of this society to bestow a book of this kind in lieu of the medals usually used. [Chieago Herald. FANOUR DOGE. A French paser, the Petit Journal, has published a »3ll of honor of cele- bratel dogs which have distinguished themselves in war. This is not inap- propriate, considering that the dog has been pressed into military service. For instance, there was Bob, the mastiff of the Grenadier Guards, which made the Crimean campaign with that gallant corps; and also White-paw, * Patte Blanche,” a brave French ally of Bob, that made the same campaign with the 116th of the line, and was wounded in defending the flag. Another, Moustache, was entered on the strength of his regi. ment as entitled to a grenadier’s rations. The barber of his company had orders to clip and comb him once a week. This gullant animal received a bayonet thrust at Marengo. and recovered a flag at Aus. terlitz. Marshal Lannes had Mous- tache decorated with a medal attached to his meck with a red ribbon. Corps de Garde, a marvel amo dogs, followed a soldier to Rurongy was wounded at Austerlitz, and perished in the retreat from Russia. The Sixth of the Guard had a military mastiff named Misere, which ware three white stripes sown on his black bair. We have also to name Pompon of the Forty- eighth Bedouins, the best sentry of the baggage train; Loutonte, a Crimean heroine; Mitraille, killed at Inkerman by a shell; Moffino, that saved his mas. ter in Russia, and wae Jost or lost lime solf, but found his way along ir va Moa cow to Milan, his first dwelling place, The most remarkable, however, was the last an English harrier named Mustapha, which went into action with his Eaglish comrades at Fontenoy, and, we are seriousiy told, “remained alone by a field pisce after the death of the gunner, his master, clapped the match to the touch-hoie of the cannon, and thes killed seventy soldiers;” and it is farther added that Musta was presented to aatied King George 11. with a pension alimentam, —{ Court Journal, ‘ A PREVIOUS ENGAGEMENT, 3 Greone-—Come and dine with me at a table d'bote this evening. White—1 should be delighted, only that | have an engagement to Gll. °° G With whom?