SOMEWHAT STRANGE. ACCIDIINTS AND INCIDE v's OF EVERY DAY LIVE Thrilling Adven- That Truth is Queer Facts and tures Which Show Stranger A story comes here from Tecumseh, in the Pottawatomie country, Oklahoma, that seems to be well authenticated. It] is to the effect that between Tecumseh and Purcell, on the bunks of the Cana sian river, lives John James, a negro, with his wife and hell dozen children, | One day a seven-year-old son took the | baby, aged eizht months, out for a ride | fn his wagon. Soon after the boy rushed | into the house naked and stated that he | had gooe in swimming and left the baby in the wagon on the bank. Suddenly | the wagon started down on the bank, sud it and the baby plunged into the | viver and sank out of sight. The parents ran to the stream, but could find no traces of the baby. Help was secured and the river was dragged, the wagon was soon pulled out no baby could be found, and aft tl searchers gave up and were held in memory o A few days after the and brother of the drowned veeded in landing that had swallowed lines What their they came to clean the fish, te its ‘mains chi ly was badly mu The remains of the child were in a coffin with some portio from which they could not rated, and another funeral » Tue Duke 1 ‘ $s QQ son, FLL Ver since nis en but though | three days servic 05 little the child 1 funcral f the funeral one father si an immenss isl the hook on their was their horror, y find within n dir stomach the h ld. The boc of 1 repla Grand (reoroe 804 return, tour has been for pulmonary Abbas Tuman yrivate lett is Imperi rrr forced throt from medical », has bee in the from the pl Hichuess is undergoi atm treatmet ( ieLiet il rkable course furniture is vithout upholsteri any kind, and he thinnest of mattresses bet $35.) past winter only a very n kept up, wi nd Duke's 1 HAVE compe o'clo time i K It is parents, fer $ 3 iegoendas bye } 1 F +} i hill of a seventh Child » for the King's evil nan who lived in Br I doctor til happ ned tion in Mitchell fn our timo at least { the days when the buffalo roamed the West ‘*At the junc Ka he writes, sandstone mix Water passi will be a reminder Of plains o tics two « bea of friable COArse graves ledge h 3 has § | f the great of ret TAS Lia holes are fror realar, and fr There are from all filled with | : i sandstone hole tor six feet wide, ed 100 fort cep. nty of them, By the long-continues the gravel hay 1 or cistern-like, and in some the wall dividing two wells has been cut through This must have been a favorite watering place with the buffalo. In the ock is cut a deep trail down to the water. And where the steepest the foot marks are over six inches deep, showing that every animal passing there put its foot exactly in the spot upied by | those which had preceded it.” ol) to fifteen to twe fresh churning of made jug-shap instances water thes been solid 1 descent is iv Ax extraordinary story about stamps | has been recalled by the recent death, at eighty-four years, of Miss Penelope | Eve ry, of D why, Fuogziand About 1850 a paragraph went the rounds of the press to the effect that a wealthy and eccentric individual had announced his | determination to send his daaShter to a | punnery unless she could collect in a given time an almost impossible number of cancelled postage stamps. Miss Every applied to a friend who had interested | himself in the case, and by some misun- | derstanding a second paragraph published associating Miss Every name with the task of collecting stamps towards | the razsom. Immediately Eggintoan | Hall--the residence of her fathor was inundated with English and foreign stamps to the number of 2,500,000. The invasion was so great that Miss Every wis obliged to ask in the papers that no further supplies might be sent. The letters which accompanied many of the consignments were bound up into portly volumes, and they might vet be seen in the family library. i i WHS | Ix Oldtown is a man who is making money fast out of clams, though he is at present feeding the clams to his pigs, says the Boston Transcript. He Keeps a hotel and has bonded a clam flat down around Mount Desert. His clams arrive each day. He keeps them two weeks, feeding them on celery meal and Indian menl. They laugh and grow fat. Then he boils them, a bushel at a time. He puts is a quart of water and takes out eight quarts, The water is strained and set e for a day in a refrigerator, Then itis heated, seasoned with salt and He has a biz trade. A bushel of clams delivered costs 60 cents. He feeds them 40 cents’ worth, He gives a four ounce drink, There are thirty-two drinks in a gallon and sixty-four drinks are secured from a bushel of clams. Net profit on a bushel of clams, $2.20, and he sells on some days six gallons. Many try to imi tate him, but no one knows how to feed the clams as he docs, lis pigs grow fast, moreover. Batney Hoover, a young min em: ployed on the Curtiss ranch near Wood lands, Cal., reports a strange experience with birds. He was driving a single from the Fair ranch When about two miles from Knight's Landing he was suddenly startled out of a doze by myriads of birds which swarmed down upon him, screaming angrily and fiying at him. The air was literally black with them, and they viciously ittacked the horse, which was frightened into a frantic effort to run away The young man was scared beyond his powers of description He fought the birds ofl with his whip and, directing the hors best he could, was soon beyond their pursuit, He said they ly al hla kbirda, although there appear among the army wore be species Cnemies, amount of moisture three 8 man, ‘Is pages will carry,” savs § ¥ enormous and is fre tly heavy enough to turn the scale call pos A larg 1 of mail matter of mine was reported id for not long ng to the postoflice 1 found it Il within the It was explained that the mail was damp when and that the i the paper must be paid for, althougl for more tage postage ALO, and ou weighed Hmit water soaked ug as since evaporated, WH id ROCMms .Ga., has a a spider. The or small bo ¥ the Dinmixe Eagland, fol was 4 irms Were and that « shnis Was pre { He added COWS mae ar of NOV has been mddition there 1s an ave Revenesce Or yw el « 1 fiers Persons ] investigation show s that ove per cent. of the Out of 312,766 familics only in houses by themselves, { unde to ¢ houses ay families liv: the other people ten families each apastments in a flat whole house in purchase of a house, contain oves Ret are very high the even on the instalment plan, offers grave New York has been called “the landlord's paradise.” A TRANSVAAL fey achievements paper says of Mi 1 “It would be casy for President Kruger nam: 1,000 burghers who would have gone as far for half the price as did Mr. Stanley There are indeed many Boers who have done as much as Mr, Stanley has done, to ation, whose names are anknowan, and who themselves think nothing of their The extraordinary suc- cess of Mr. Stanley in attaining world. wide renown is an cxeellent proof of what advertising can do, ot a concert in Vienna performed a piece on the plano, com: posed by a resident of the city, and was enthusiastically applauded. She bowed repeatedly, and then rushed off the stage, to return presently, leading the com poser forward, the fresh applause greeted him, and pointed to the lady, intimating that to fer the credit was due. He could not soe the audience, for he is blind, Souvriixag wonderful in the line has been constructed by a mechanic in Warsaw, Poland, It represents a railway station with a clock-tower giving the time in four countries. Trains ron into or depart from the station every fifteen minutes, Station agents, tele. graphers, ticket-sellers, with lines of passengers, are seen fn action, and the usual bustle and tumult of a station are heard and seen, bells ringing, whistles pepplr and sold for five cents a glass, blowing, etc. A CURIOUS PRODUCT, Shellane Is, and the Uses to Which It is Pat. What makes your Derby stiff? Shellac. What Is shellac? It is the product of a young twigs and branghes of the butea, croton and other treeshat grow in the of the east, Shellac is con world in commerce and in arts, It is kept in the shops and warchouses in large housheads, Tt varies in color and thinness and is transparent. It comes in broken pieces of irregular sizes it being very thin, The crude mass from which shellac i obtained is produ eed by some of u small insect {Coears lacea) resembling cochineal Thu tures and dies on these ber of female mseclves upon the tender twig | and the bark A fluid exudes and envelop insects feed upon this nourishment from it within it. The wings, and as soon as the females begin somewhat the hatched, ma- | twigs, A num few males, insect ix insects, with a fasten the I ) tenacious | Th derive their | and deg heir | males only have | pun ture them, juice, yosit oars emales and the males go After gelatinous to die a few f other tre main this posited their eggs died. the cges hatch voung insect. The young burrow through the dead bodie of their mothers to surface mass and cover the nei branches The bark, | 80 their 10} that re have de the female in Ass } and MRVE out the thi ghboring as are le posited close to t that bn mother's mass tha has exuded enveloped the Finally the voung twi are protected by the they bodies and : and femal insects complete Iv covered with x thick. resinous substance die the frames 1 cells th like result of decomposition th ments of a beautiful purple dy When ciently load: thos i wit natives of the trees grow strip and break them into small i s are called stickla ty {in} } He red the hands to welling to I. 20M THM) t lac ins is Burmah, sticses « The bes mpletel Th pr toy 5 000 Ft which app Orange brown fot matter is very often dark ; different varieties, such The changed As Orang and liver, juice of the trees 3 3 $ w hat t the Ins 8, bry ansonc tells you that shellac i i= not correctly inforn $s 1nd mL fh (REEL uiee of the the e of the ¢ of rosin petion tinon the Shell swoveral peculiar rosins ] Checking a Cavalry « aarge. I shall never forget was under fire said Crenshaw, to a parts their of the La + battery and | down on a stretch of ground as t ballroom. The Confeds wie rifle shot, but they opened artillery, and they did 1 plough up the ground with shot and | shell, Every old soldier knows (Jat ar tillery fire at long range is not half much to be dreaded as the rattic of musk etry, which sounds on the field like Chinese firecrackers in a thunder storm, but it ix a good deal more ‘skeery toa novice. There we lay for half an | hour, never moving a finger, watching the puffs of flame from a dozen cannon | and the shells come tearing through the | air with their fiendish shriek, apparently | headed directly for our faces, { tell you, | n position of that Kind tries the very soul of your raw recruit, Give him a chance to shoot back and he is all right, but fighti= is one thing and waiting to get killed without striking a blow is quite another. But there was more ahead of us, After the artillery duel had raged for some time a regiment of Con. foderate cavalry debouched from the wood with all the deliberation and pre. cision of a dress parade. They were Mississippians, tall, athletic fellows who wat their horses like centaurs. They halted and dressod ranks while the bat. teries behind them hurled a perfect rain of shells over their heads, We could seo their Colonel riding down the line and pointing with his sword to our bat. tery, which was plunging shells in among them with frightful rapidity, but little effect. They advanced a step or two, every horsoman seeming to choose his ground. Here they come, slowly, steadily, like mn great gray wave, conscious of irresistible power, e bugle rings out sharp and shrill, they break into a where fighting in the rotunda were supporting on ' everiastingiy any battle quick trot, 800 sabres leap into the air and the stars and bars stream out on the smoky background like a portentous meteor, On they come: B00 yards, 700, 600! Gads! has our battery gone silent? Five hundred, 400! charge! Every spur sinks deep, the ‘rebel yell’ rises from every throat and the column leaps fore ward like a thunderbolt, into the face of which crashes the canister from our four G-pounders, Great ragged holes are torn through the four-deap column, but they close instantly and if comes on un cheeked, Now it is our turn! We ar in front of the battery, in the pathway of the avalanche We pour a volley into it at cighty vards! A hundred men reel out of their saddles, a hundred horses go plunging to their knees! The Another volley and another! ined suedede nly retreat brave line wavers! The while breaks Foreign Paper Money. Bank of England note by dimen printed in black ink on Irish cight in sion with Banque need ¥ fog paper, The France are nn Fr note ’ Smerican currency and seep! 1% nbout the siz¢ lis, ¢ fEiIr red sirainm t} from the The game hou th round and ¢ the finest meat in tie killed the 1 SHOOK world, youngest and er the ined would fohers of thi anid as soon as they THO 00S that ngs $51 al had a feast t furn this cooked spit, lik meat had a i palatable, think of it pow, and it was so that we could pull it apart in strings But it kept us from ving, and I. therefore, can heartily recommend pony meat to people in dire ts." =! American Farmers essed ina ie we f.acullus lived it green with on pony meat WHS without over a The awoert taste, not at a oon 1 Hen fibrous AiAr ra An Under Valued Product, The origin of maize, or Indian corn, is unkoown, but it was first cultivated by white men on the James River, Virginia, 1608. It is, says Mr. C, J. Murphy, about the only Produc of America that is not appre fated in Europe American wheat, cotton, fruits and meats are pow well known in the world's markets, hut maize is still shunned for use in the human dietary of the British Isles and most of the Continent, Yot analysis proves that the nutritive value of maize cannot be less than fivesisths of that of wheat, This food is, moreover, of remarkable healthfuloess, and dyspepsin was hardly known in America fifty vears ago, when maize was the principal food, A surprising number of delicacies and inexpensive dishes is now supplied, not less than 130 recipes for Woling, baking and cooking this great staple having been tested and approved, The annual surplus of maize in the United States is enormous, It is used for feeding eattle and hogs, maki glucose, starch, beer and whiskey, an recently for producing oil, No part of the plant is lost. The fodder is valuable food for animals, and has been used as fuel in treeless of the West, while the husks are made into paper, or em- vioyed for filling mattresses, packing ruits, and wrapping cigars. THE SONG OF THR PEARTRER {From the French.) i A pear-tree stood at the end of the village. In the springtime it seemed ike a nosegay of flowers, The gardeners back from the road: the mrdener’s daughter was called Perrin We were lovers odge stood Il What roses in her there She was sixteen Many pear-treq heeks! As blossom mm the It was pear-tre that 1 said to her Perrine, mv Perrine beneath th 111. sintled about her ind pinyed feet which ¥ 10 bh i flow byrne hands Vis more than Virgu rend be pradsed | you will be proud of nye s ended and | have my le Ring, bells, for our wedding ong. Hm here tw travels behind The 1 the belfry. Xi the month of lowers has come, t still | the flower laden branches, | afar. That down the tree of my earls had but bat pear treed % og Qo HL SH had always seen them from wed to come on tad he ah scattered on the ground, cut COM A branches blossoms br hlossoms, its NI “Why are the bells ringing, thie” “For a wedding, Monsicut La taine.” Matthieu did not know me A wedding! He told the truth vide and groom ascended the the church, The bride was Perrine, my Perrine, and more beautiful than ever, Jean, my brother, was the bridegroom, The stops of HOYOS NiiL The people around me “They love each other.” “But Pierre,” 1 asked “What Pierre?” they answered had forgotten me, were saving, They X1V. I knelt at the church door. 1 prayed for Perrine and 1 prayed for Jean: all that 1 loved on earth, The service over, 1 gathered a blossom from the pear-tree—a poor little with ered blossom and went on my way with- out looking back, God be praised. They love each other. XV. “Monsiour 1" “You are back already, Pierre? HY" “You are only two-and twenty, You will be a General, and you will be knight ed, If you wish I will give you a countess for a wife.” Pierre took from his breast a withered flower, p Wkel from the fallen pear Lice, “Monsicur. my heart is like this. T wish a post in the vanguard, where | can dic as & Christian soldier,” The post in the vanguard waz given him, At the end of the village there is the grave of a Colonel killed on the day of victory —two-and-twenty In place of a name there are thess throes aod be praised | words THE CHILKAT INDIANS, heir Strange Character and Change of Customs, Pioneer Packhorses J i ollowine quotation aie dressed in Kin obtained from inland trily frie a yd won the garments picturesq i, ami bea . . He wore brace. rricd copper spears, fie it to perish in WHR 8 Warrior, battle In complete vo Cremony was human sacrifice; execu- frequent occurrence, { disaster i1¢ deemed 14 spirits widkding of re and hand-to- fromm the slightest hen for sll the LO plunge each er, into th Cy asters ti) “ then to thrash maed whips ion were $hor- | appre ntice effect of they yand Crormandizir their ATL tow ethbwegded Int & Iwiween wi re fol then OY POTS on eciared the i condemn hamcter the COM POs {io unsympathetic, nt to desth rior which they I noticed ot witl that I asked of one Koosh' ‘Blake n't know I Then he explaine ae ( hief for three mountains fog; » for a tine by calling aher, but finally the grew fainter ould no longer same breath with this ex. anal Indian asked me, ‘Have the salmon started to run up our river? mored his question, and asked agsin, is Kienta Koo h?' As if dis sted at my interest in such a trivial the man answered quite soap I don’t know : cither he has been i by a bear or drowned crossing one swollen streams, Kienta | 3} » yh’)? s $ LI a dense and 3 f Hed then « be 1f where Friday Not the Most Unlucky Day. A statistician of the German Govern com? to the rescue of those persons who da not shar the wide-spread superstition that Friday is the most un lucky day of the week A short time determined to make a scientific investigation of this question, using for most fatal or unfortu nate week day, according to the investi Six. seventy. four hundredths per teen and day, the same per cent. on Saturday, and 2.69 per cont. on Sunday. Comment upon the small percentage of accidents on the first day of the week is unnecessary, The compiler of the table, however, attributes the large relative number of accidents on Monday “to the excessive amount of liquor consumed on Sunday.” Origin of the Liberty Cap. When the Romans manumitted a slave his head was adorned with a small red cloth cap. As soon as this was done ho was known as a libertinus or freedman, and his name was rogistered among others of the city's *‘tribes.” In the year 263, when Saturninus in. vaded the capital, says the New Orleans Picayune, ho hoisted a cap on the Join ves af is sea, to indicate that all who around this standard be free. This was the origin of the liberty cap, still used in art as a symbol,