ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS OF EVERY DAY LIFE, Queer Episodes and Thrilling Adven- tures Which Show That Truth is Stranger Than Fiction, A Burraro man who recently did Chinatown while in San Francisco re- ceived a shock the other night that he will not forget for some time to come, Returning home late in the evening he felt a stinging sensation on the surface of his right leg. He examined the spot and dumbfounded to discover a large brown patch on the skin, which his wife at once pronounce ! to be Chi- nese leprosy. Doctors were hastily sent for and after four of them had been in counsel for an hour no decision was ar- rived at. The patient was put to bed, where he lay and groaned as he thought of his skin drying up and his limbs dropping off at the joints. His heart- broken wife sat by his bedside and for- got in her wating tooth- ache from which she had suffered all day. But th th fin: its Known, was presence she hesitatingly asked: did you forget to bring thache/drops I asked vou to get!” ; atflict- ary,” feebly answers packet and deliberately cut his throat in cull sight of all the people surrounding the burning pe. A woopEN-LEGGED veteran living at Shelton Centre, Conn., sct to work re. ceutly to make a frame for the support of his tomato vines. In order to keep the posts stendy while he nailed the slats, he placed his wooden leg against them and drove the nails in witha vim. After nailing one end he started to go to the uaxt post, and was surprised when he found that he could not move. Visions of paralysis passed over his mind, until, ou examining, he found that he had driven the nails through slat and post into his wooden leg. Winey a sailing master wishes to buy oysters in the ports of the Chesapeake he runs up to the masthead an oyster basket, and presently has plenty offered at the vessel's side. Down at Chinco teague island the basket at the masthead is sometimes accompanied by a flag of concentric squares in different colors During the closed season for oysters the basket and flag indicate that the master wishes to buy clams, The Chincoteague clam di during part of the year, and a very spry thick hundred the greater man in tread Fi r works oan in per great many a day, 1.000 at Chincoteague, “You will SETS Po kot." , there was not even one » bottle had become un corked, an leg had absorl inally contai “It h Buffalo man the other day to News re rter ‘that 1s a well-establi some di ilmost any of fo ng in the Way 3 hear of cases displays a marked appeti iting liquor, but tter that caps th “Did No? of vOry and ey Thomas { been Mo., t ITitos head for twenty minu turned times, Then the Dass head ously, and ] he | surface into the § 3 Man nel The fishermen | had put out his ey gide of hi ] wot Spot 44 seven pounds, OE of the few civilia pension from the United ment is an Hs physique, who has the record of having come alive through an dent. Hi rishman of pee astounding acci. ‘ was carrving a torpedo under his arm one day at Now port while he and an officer went in a boat to a point where the exple sive sunk, by some accident the electric connection was made and the torpedo exploded. The man went skyward and lit in the water an eighth of a mile away with one arm shattered, one side shockingly mangled. and an eye blinded. He manag ad to ! keep afloat until aid came, and in time | he recovered sufficiently to return to | work, although not at his former dan gerous job. Wonrkmex at the Baltimore and Ohio elevator saw a fight between a crab and a rat at Baltimore. The mt went down a stringer to get a drink and a crab | caught him by the head, A fierce tag | followed, the rat apparently having the better of it for a while, He could steady hin self by his foothold, The crab used his method of propulsion with energy, and churned the water about him. The rat's power of endurance finally gave | way, and he fell overboard, but he still did his best to release himself, He struggled hard, but the crab held on | until the rat was drowned. The crab was so exhausted by the fight that when the rat floated to the surface the crab swam away, Tune was a disastrous fire at Freien wald, in Prussia, at which eight people dost their lives, A young man was ac sively engaged in rescuing men and waluables when part of the house fell in and two rafters caught him by the logs. Both his legs were so tightly wedged between the timbers that he could not be extricated and he was surrounded by flames in a minute. In his terror of having to die a slow death by being burned he cried out to the men to shoot him or kill him in any way so as to save him from burning. But there was none to respond to his prayer. In desperation de fetched his claspknife out of his was to x when Ix Cast 0, + 3 chant named Billotte a i recently captured by bandits PROM A TOLEN Kisses ma aw rather dear at th nt market Talca, of that t it polis 0S A PHoTouRAPHER 11 presentment bear in the act of making fo di ry Excrasn’s Queen sine her reign | the Ix ginning of death on warrant, ¥ Isle of Man, the act tler Majesty of death warrants having, bs in execution in passed for re the signing of an oversight, not included that part of Her Majesty's the meving dominions Ax Englishman stalking deer in Glen Tana forest dropped two fine stags with bullet. The ball struck the animal in the backbone, killing him in stantly, and passed on into the breast of the one first wi cond. An Electric Frying Pan. It is now possible to cook with elec. The bottom of an ordinary fry- amel, in which is embodied a zig-zag wire conveying the current, To prevent radiation from the insulating enamel the plate on its under surface is protected with asbestos. The wire is made of an coming very hot it makes the iron pan hot-—about 480 degrees to 500 degrees, coffee made in a jifly, while the expense teen-power incandescent lamp. There With an electric frying pan comparatively nothing. — [St.Louis Globes Democrat, ER a amet Sroxor Popping. Two cups of flour; one tablespoonful of melted butter; one cup of Jowdared sugar; six eggs, whites only, whipped stiff; two cups of milk; one teaspoonful of rose water or other prefunie colorless extract; two teaspoon. uls baking powder, Rub butter and sugar to a cream, stir in Jreaumliy the milk, then the frothed whites, lastly, and very lightly, the flour, which has | sifted twice with the baking powder. Bake in cups or a mold and eat with liquid sauce, DEAD MEN TURNED TO STON E. Away upamong the sagebrush of White far removed from the shriek of nccasional prospector is a strange, silent pity. Once more than 35,000 people car ried on all kinds of business and traffic It was during the phenomenal rush to White Pine in 1867. Many hun It was , new city, which never slept, and Mark Twain This was the story the telling made “Now, if vou go there,” said he, ‘you only a few of buildings, for most of them have fallen in and decayed yet remain those cabins the sound of man’s footsteps, of men lie buried and where headstone marks their last The headstones, where there werd were of wood and they quit Kly formation of limestone, per olating through it part kes of and this in has petrified the bodies “8a i on resting place any at rot all about Water thie many cas all, ted away. ‘he ' there is largely nature of lime, Wer in the great gras every nand pete to be out of hold it in re noe, and altho select great numbers of them to their snake-dances, they but, when the ci them out on the Zuni Indi with whom | fused to repeat their doors for fear the rattlesnakes hear St. Nicholas, Vire wver kill # 3 remony is finished, plains and release them 3 % from New Mexico, became } Notre 7 acquainted, rv folklore out { on would AROUND THE HOUSE, Where ice is a scarce commodity var ious expedients may be adopted for keeping provisions fresh and for cooling water, ete. Every one knows how much cooler water may be made by putting it and twirling it around, wetting the bot. the watering-pot. A good way of keep ing butter or milk cool in hot weather without ice is to fill a box with sand to withinan inch or two of the top, to sink to thoroughly wet it and keep the box in the cellar, The good housckeeper is not the one who indulges in periodic serubbings and overhaulings, but one who keeps her yremises so scrupulously clean, while she i#2 about her work, that there is never any need to the superficial observer for the stated cleaning days, which like the good workman's systematic care of his engine, keeps the machinery always In working order. The housekeeper whose scrubpail is a continual accompaniment of her housekeeping, must bo a careless, shiftiess manager. It is the art of keep: ing a house clean, not of making it clean, that characterizes good housekeeping. It is a disentanglement of the snarls of work, that wear out time and patience, and break down the strength of body and nerve, The average woman who has not yet learned how to manage her work, wastes about one-half her strength in useless energy, in unmethodical ways, taking ten where she need take but one. When work is once reduced to system i and each part follows properly the other, when the housekeeper hins learned the true economy of time and strength, we will hear little of broken-down house- keepers unable to withstand the weight of the daily toil which comes to their lot, A Gigantic Irrigation Eeheme, Beyond all question, the irrigation scheme being pushed in Florida by a number of capitalists of Cincinnati, 0, ; Philadelphia, and New York is to be the grontest North America has ever seen, [It | is exclusively a private enterprise, con- | ducted by a stock company that has no stock to sell, no mort. At present it is only a big land syndicate, but it may develop into the the world The company existence for months, agents has se | « ured at a bonds to flout, no gages to necotinte, giant monopoly of had and through few nt 1s an ts tract of cents an John jahty-three miles long « It has three feet of Acre a land on the i rich worth six miles wide. i muck, hundred : i Acre Ww he ie aud, it is once hen drained been An el svsel thie b 4 LS Ww Ba Hake Fhe Best Talking Bird, S000 ODO #530 § HAN at Caron Daniel, family, and each of their children born on the sam of the month, the old folks date, live the iis wife thre | Were Fhe wedding anniversary o { falls +n the If the | Montana, have not been recently changed | they still surround 36,000 square miles of territory, making that one country larger | than the five States of Vermont, Massa | chusetts, Connecticut, Delaware and | Rhode Island. same interesting boundaries of Custer County, Dr. Kayser from his lofty station on | succeeded in taking some fine photo. ! | graphs of the aurora borealis, weigh 8,685.8 pounds. The same amount of silver coins would weigh 58,020.9 pounds. In the fall of 1890 G. C. Sexsmith, a farmer living near Atchison, Kas, found an ear of corn which showed an odd number of rows of grain—19, A Mr. Goodman of London bot that he could smoke 86 cigars to an inch in less than 12 hours, He did it with 42 min. utes to spare, Chemical action formed a stone in the stomach of La Marshale, the famous hurdle: jumping horse of Paris. Ho died, and the stone, a ball nearly 8 inches in diameter, is in the museum of a Parisian veterinary. Vulean, the British ironclad, is pro. vided with a rudder weighing 223 tons, or something like six tons heavier than the rudder used on the Great Eastern, Charles D. Young, of Denver, Col, has built a perfect miniature locomotive, which is but five fect long and weighs bat 285 pounds, Acconpiso to Chicago authorities { the little Ones well Fair are going to be { fooked after at the biz World's | There will be a children's home and | zreche where the little ones can be left tin safe hands during the day of sight seeing. In many cases it will be im { possible for the mothers to visit the World's Falr without taking their chil dren, and in so doing they will wish th { little as well as thems the fullest advantage of the facilities there offered, No plan having by the Board of Direc Ones Aves to take be n made tors {or i 6 children's building, and no funds hav ing been appropriated for this the | up the work of building and equipping a beautiful stracture purpose, shall be de voted entirely to children and their in The ation which Soard has secured a desi adjoining hi to build the I'he building wil on whie | hay All assem wining rows from which stere "i i.1 older which calming than as a un above thi condemns tl 1 of i " This was carried W. H. ag ovidently yakivn the R33. Lex of Br investigated and in deta the New York Press making an esti that 200,000 aliens annually return this « to their native lands carry ing £200 each. ot £10,000, 000 Many these hinese, who are estimated to have carried out of America $700,000 000 in the last forty-two Th annual drain of $10,000.00 by all the returning aliens, and of $100,000,000 by Euronean travel of the well to do, how ever, =o far as it actully consists of Uni ted States money, is offset by the expor tation of goods in exchange for the re turning cash, which does not circulate with som ATE from country are { of Years, Muon J. M. Bavax, of the Territory, seems likely to get the biggest on record 83 per cent of $8,000,003. This is con- “old Set which has been before con past seventeen yoars, othors on the docket of the Supreme Court, which has to review the decision, and will be passed upon at its next session. At the late meeting of the old sottiers, at Talequab, 1. T.. Msjor Bry. an’s contract, conceding him 85 per cent of the property if the suit was success ful, was renewed, As Tie blind person's only association with the world about is by means of sound it is not at all surprising that it is through a musical training that the great majority of them are fitted to carn a livelihood. In various parts of the United States ee ne now 150 blind le employed as piano tuners, ere on Fully pl many more who are teachers of music in schools for the blind, nearly 500 who sre private teachers of music, 100 who are church organists, 15 or 20 who are com blishers of iments A German authority savs that almost "that is 400.000 language inngruage is apoki fi Dy Fourth, the while the language is spoken by 57,000, ind the Hpanish by 48 G04). Of t European the fifth in place, Tue pneuny Face all humanit ¥ . 000, speak in the Then the Hindoo rmore than 100 0006 000 5,000 000, Chinese th he languages ilky has come to stay on the Hobort Bonner esumed to be able to on the subiect, f; that $v Sa asin im that it is going i records, as it i from two the mle, Rats That Catch E or ros twenty mies o pros edd ton the he AVY anited offorts o tug Tyee was eng the say evening saw beached at Neah bare bones of that sa red by wind and wave g in the sun, for, on ons, the services of the entire tribe, are required in stripping the flesh from the huge skeleton, in return for which sexvice such oc. hing festoons of whi h hanging along the joists and houses for weeks to come, drying in the smoke of the fires, to be hoardsd up for use in the winter months, [Port Townse nd (Wash. ) Graphic. long be will A Serpentine Mound in Ohio. One of the greatest archrological dis. coverics of vears, one that will excite antiquarians throughout the world, has been made near Lebanon, Ohio, In has been known for a long time that peculiar location and the varied character of the finds they were not identified until arts of a single earthwork—a serpentine mound, Professor Putnam of the Peabody Museum verified the discovery, and pro. nounces it one of the greatest of Amer. ican antiquities. Mr. Metz of the Poa body Museum and World's Exposition has surveyed it, and with Professor Put. nam is making explorations in it. The serpentine mound is 1,900 feet long snd about ten feet through. The famous Adams county mound is much smaller, and was Supposed to be the onl one in existence, © find is ina archwlogical district. {San Francisco Examiner, Narrow leather makes trimming for cloth “gl Gy dresses,