SAVING LIFE AT SEA. Lives Sometimes Put in Peril to Make One Rescue. Much imperiling of life is demand- ed in the mid-vcean rescue of a drown- ing man, and such an incident al- ways furnishes intense dramatic in- terest for a spectator. The Baron de Malortie, in a recent interesting work, recalls an exciting scene he witnessed years ago while crossing the Atlantic. The ship was several days out, when one afternoon he was idly lounging about on the upper deck. “Suddenly,” he says, ‘‘I saw a man approach the bulwark. He threw overboard some objects—we learned afterward that they were his Bible and a rosary—and followed them with a header into the foaming sea. ‘Man overboard!’ I cried, but the storm covered my voice, and I rushed up to the brides to call the attention of tho officer on duty to the acéident. Stop! Half speed astern, and orders for the lowering of the bout were the aflairs of a minute or two. ‘Volunteers to man the boat!’ shouted a young mid- shipman, catting a lifeboat from the davits, Ten forward for every one wanted, and, selecting four of the most powerful tars, the middy was lowering the boat, when a young doctor, q wickly pocketing i flask of brandy for a restorative, let himself down one of the ropes and reached the boat as a monumental wave was dashing ever it. The men pulled with a will and the gallant little nut shell fought bravely down the mountains of angry suicide, he wae from time to time something like a human on the top of a white-cre “Oh. the watched both Disappearing alto when we feared men came ne. Hp aia waters, sted wave. with and which wi its ments, y last of 1 § $4 these noble fellos A her gigautie anxiety } + the boat goal! wave would rain like a It was gaining 1 came, while we were slowly f in 1ts wake. “There! loctor throws a belt. They only some yar 1s off now. Bat no, a cruel i them past the object of their dous efforts. i are ing round he passe | the r COrK. was lowing 1: Mie has tossed tremen- throw- dy Wave master, and, he and the d tion. 1s hooked ; t} perately ere critical “But board? men ment. They hel water ; an has done the are busy on board, “The long the proximity fully met » SO Dey i whom r« had driven to th not require him to, venture in sondemne rest of th punishmet lives to this treal Star. The Parrot That Scared the Cats obwect to I ina any ners parrot {ireal Baggage of the two mortal coaxing his log IRCILY When the ore large sleek cat bagga aoying the to the cage ar nose between ting Poll he woul only out an hour, grown dense by Poll's direct ‘Ha! The conversation lifted and : like a feather duster a gleeful smile, and t back to trouble aronsed hin ont Fhe parrot smiled he eat did not come him Modern Cave Dwellers. Island, Behring off Port Clarence there On King's thirty miles shores of Alaska, the most seen, The island, of rock, they inhabit ia about half a mile wide and little more than that distance long, and the islanders are cave dwellers and live on whale blubber, seal and walrus meat. Ou the southeast side, closely nestling against the cliff, is a village of the cave dwellers. One abode is built under the other, and to the right and left, presenting a most curious appearance. These strange people are usually as strong and vigorous as can be found any. where. They have no government, no chief and need no laws. Living in families and setting forth every day in their kinks for the whale, seal and walrus, they return each night to their caves, or pole tents, caring nothing for the outside world. They are respected for their sagacity, but that is all, in Straits, and the 200 of ver nre shout curious islanders that « were : | A PECULIAR INDUSTRY. York Court, A new industry was brought to light in the Jefferson Market Court this morning, when William Hansche, eighteen wears old, a resident of Brooklyn, and Richard Ferner, nine: teen years of age, 880 Eleventh ave- nue, were arrmgned for disorderly condnet. The complainant was Will iam Cunningham, 603 West Forty- third street, who 18 employed as a watchman on the stock yard dock at the foot of West Fortieth street. Po- liceman McAnnany, who made the ar- rest, opened the case. He said: “Your Honor, these men are profes- sional pig rescuers. It is the custom around the stock yards on the West Side, where a pig falls or jumps into the river, to pay the man that fishesit out 81, I'he prisoners here have res- ened innzmerable pigs, but of late the pigs have been cautions and many have fallen overboard. To make up for the loss of rewards, these have recently been driving the pigs into the river, and then pulling them They made so much noise doing disturbed this watch- : l canght them in night. That's the case.’ Cunningham then addressed “Jud Ie, these men a number of t disturb the pigs, At 7 dock, and very men out. this that they man here, and act nat warned to last conrt as follows: I've not o'clock Bo overh i. s too nere, who the was lay for 1 don't kn Maybe some other them. poor pig. grabbi i of the or m out.” them, what became i dro 144 A mavoe puzzled ning to the prisoners, i 3 visibly x Of board from ry prej and the Magistrate said ‘Well, 1 don’t bla not a ve 7's fault,” id that inasmuch iocked ible to bring the i out whether it had ard, Mag wn his ip all thrown over he the compisint. pth theredap rs, with x ‘warn somehow respot Dundee ints out that this is an The creator of wa® Thomas Morton, born 1704, died 1538), the author of "Box and e¢ is referred to in his ‘Speed the Plou which performed in Mrs character in that merely a mysterious personage whom Dame Ashfield, the farmer's wife, constantly quotes much in the same way ns Gamp alludes to Mrs, Harris, tér in the wr real 8 8 not a he is Ripening by Electricity. By lighting his hot-houses at night with electric lights of 5,000 candle power, all told, Dr. Werner von Siemens, an eminent German electri cian, ripens raspberries in seventy five days, grapes in two months and a half, ete The expression ‘in geason’’ may soon lose significance in this connection, since by the ap plication of electricity fruits and the year. The fruits thus producad are remarkable for brilliant color and fine aroma, but are not as aweet ns those ripened by the sun. The pro- cess may serve to amuse wealthy scientists, but it is not likely to | come into universal use. oy Lead Mining Declining. The United States geological sur. | vey report says that the lead mining | industry for 1504 was one of except- | lonally low prices. Mining declined {and It was necessary to draw on for. | eign sources to supply deficiencies, | The production of refined lead in the | United States was 219.000 short tons {in 1894. The production of 1898 wes 220,000 short tons. NOTES AND COMMENTS. Tae total yicld of cereals this year 18 placed at over three and a half billion bushels (8,600,000,000), or 1,300,000,000 bushels more than the production of last year. If he had 70,000,000 people in the country this would give 250 bushels to each family with 100,000,000 bushels to spare. The figures are large, but no larger than the problem of marketing the surplus so as to get an-approximation to its real value. Tue Chicago News tells of a queer case that will come up in the Minnesota courts, In that State the moose is protected game. While out shooting a man named Phair attacked by a moose. Owing, he says, to the fact that shooting WAS prohibited by law, Phair did not at- tempt to his gan. The quence was he was seriously injured by the animal. Phair is now institut- ing damage proceedings against the animal soon Wis Noose use COnse- is a ward of the State, and that he was thus handicapped from d himself. delending Oxce when Pasteur was dining with his daughter and her family her home in Burgundy he took eare to dip lass of water the that for dessert to arcfally napkin His 4 ii cherries and his inagg were servi d wipe th before puttin fastidious: the table, them jor at aen m ¢ with 8 month. length and inter, 1 ¥ 4 ag ra the Persepol mer famed for th 3 mistiaps s But sine sian (Governm has aoquire i her aud fitted he hhguns and with =a which, her bow, has a ) rings and diving d un very ram, to its insecurely fixed ol f slippiz wnward, powerful and mag- that Persians, Tue old Minnesota, which figured with the Congress and the Cumberland in the Monitor-Merri- mae fight at Hampton Roads March, 1862, 1s, to a Washington dispatch, to be turned over to the State of Massachusetts at once for the of the naval militia, This dis- pomtion of the Minnesota is in ac- cordance with the act of Congress of August 3, 1804, authorizing and em- powering the Secretary of the Navy to loan unserviceable naval vessels to the naval militia organizations for in shore armories for purposes of instroe. tion and drill. Under this act, the New Hampshire {{rigate) is loaned to New York, the Wyandotte (monitor) to Connecticut, the Ajax (monitor) to New Jersey, the St. Louis (frigate) to Pennsylvania, the Nantucket imonitor) o North Carolina, the Dale (corvette) to Maryland, and the Minnesota to Massachusetis, mo she has become nificent man-of-war 1% to say, In » eves of patriotic war frigat« in according Re “Frw people,” says the Philadelphia Record, *‘have any idea of the enor. greyhounds in shipshape. It costs the International Navigation Company nu an average 810,000 a month for ro. pairs to the varions vessels. They aro thoroughly overhauled every month, Tae work of gathering statistics of the loss of life and property from light- been done with care | and comprehensiveness that seem to be demanded. The Weather Bureau began in 1890 to keep a record of deaths from lightning. For the four years 1890-"93 these numbered 784, an average of 196 a year, Prior to this the United States was kept by Mr. H, F. Kretzer, of St. Louis, Mo., his sources of information being 192 news. papers, daily, weekly, and monthly. He found that for the five years 1883. ‘87 there were 1030 deaths eaused by lightning, an average of 206, Bo far as the records show, and there are no re- turns at all from several States, thers tere in the United States in the eight years ending 1892, 3516 fires by lightning, and entailing a loss of 812 663,855, or than 400 a year, with a yearly loss ex- Of the builldings were 2335 barns, 664 and 104 churches, caused An average of more ceeding $1,500,000, strucl dwellings there I'ue Parisian police are now much speculation among the It walked into 3 the other day, form of a man, This | the chemist by is a source of won de the pol the bears int mens members f force. one of and is 11 to destroy hin cientifie | chloride of ons oocurrea next largest in July, hind. Thel is large nnt un Jannary explained : New Year drinking, while expinpation given of the numbers and August are the holidays and sonths, February, June, November the figures in the admission of ma . The majority ot the on the other hand, were admitted from June to October, the earlier part ol the year showing a decided minority. Some curious facts appear in Dr. Gil July trips in these: October and show 3 lowest females, lespie’s statement regarding the ocen- pations of the drinkers, Of the 329 168 were housewives, lanndresses, 21 charwomen, 20 sbop- girls and 19 beguars, tramps, ete., 18 servants, 18 factory hands, and 10 girls at home. Among the others, five were barmaids and two teachers, Of the 935 males, 461 were of the laboring class, eom- prising — Laborers, 89; skilled labor- ers, 172: trade laborers, 161 ; factory workers, 16, and railway employes, 13; 119 were of the shopkeeping class; 108 were of the professional class, in- cluding 49 clerks; 84 belonged to the liquor trade, and 26 were beggars, tramps, ete. The months of January, April and July were the months in the laboring class generally women, 33 seamairesses, were The Bicycle Led Horse. —— necessary wonld astonish even the old voyager. In the shops at Jersey City there is a duplicate of every bit of machinery used in the makeup of an ocean liner, from enormous pieces of shafting down to the smallest bolt. The crowning insult to the horse went unresented the other day. Down avenue rolled a man on a aged horse, in the prime of life and usefulness. The horse jogged along ontcher, who clears the ship of the little posts. He baits his traps with the core of a head of lettuce and places a rat in each one, his experience being that the others will then more readily enter. On an average, fifty rats are enught in this manner after every voyage. Heo | evidently realized his degradation, to resent it. And lovers of the horse man’s intelligent friend and compan- ion, looked after him pityingly and wished he would back up, pull the man off the wheel and dance on the machine~but he didn’s. SIBERIAN RAILWAY, it Will Shorten the World The works tion great BSiberias Are pushed along with much energy, and there can be little doubt but that this extended line silt bee plete ! earlier than was anticipated. Before six, and perhaps even before five, years elapsed it will be possible to complete in ten, twelve or fourteen way journey over a vast a few years ago known, and the irip around the world will probably have been shortened by some twenty days From 8t. Peters- barg the journey via Moscow and So- mora to the Ural Mountains can done in three days. The d from St. Petersburg to the Siberian frontier by rail 18 about 1700 mil At Tsehet commences } West Siberian which the Journey Rourd by Twenty Days. the being with in Lonne intlway have ia rails which 1 paratively days region Hnn- WHE COI He stance 900 miles, This maonotonons intry, rivers, lob d. rection, the Siberian Petty Economies ground rents hod & have 8h enturies to com favorite and that the the hat he once took his pair in person to a « them EAWwW like since I've heen 1¢e business You either the great pauper in England, or the Marquis of === ‘1 am the i pauper,’ said from being offended amused To mount shoe-strings, even to him, and a new pair of shoes ways brings on a violent fit of are ont marquis his lord gou % sad necessity of donning them at all Lord Eldon was a peer of this pat tern, only he proceeded to the other extremity, and would never allow his wife and daughters but one between them. One wonders what pretty Betty Surtees saw in him to induce Her to elope with him, cost what it might There is a Frenchman whose ec~ centricity in respect of a pet mean ness is very often commented upon in Paris, for, though he has a model establishment and positively rolls in money, he cannot bear to use towels freely —his own or his neighbors’. It is said that upon staying at one of the old castles of Brittany fora week he took his hostess aside privately and showed her over three dozen towels that he had been gloating over for days. ‘‘All these, madame, I have saved,” he remarked, with great delight. ‘‘ Your servants put them in my room, it is true but I and ny wife have only used one between 18 Servants are careless, wast "ul ageatures., [return tho rest.” it Rained Popped Sparrows. of the men J ever slickest it One up to all the dodges to advertise his He happened to strike one town in which English spar rows were a great nilsance, and the ad offered a bounty The baking powder y to give and of- goods, on his goods i big xtern the Bpar- rows in town | His proposition was gle dly accept~ ed began He Beene weeks, 80 he Bo a8 the evening Long ~-Sufliering couple about the room two or three nu ns be hen she Ww with a litt and 1 Sometimes a hunters mnst stopping when it stops bons hen th marel and startang After a certain are m pared The one who ha largest number wins the first prize, while the booby prize is fittingly awarded to the one having the fewest again when it starts time the finds & the Some other sport are often to see who can nuts in one hand from one table another. A boy ought to win this. Forty-two is a good number. trialg that are great vdaced Ofie ie Tie ~ to intr carry the most 1 Shot by a Morse. A peculiar accident occurred in East Monmouth, Me. Aman by the name of Prescott was leading a colt, when the animal whirled and kicked, striking Prescott in the region of the hip pocket, where he carried a loaded revolver. The revolver was dis- charged, the bullet lodging in the calf of Mr. Prescott’s leg. A ENA Where Tobacco is Grown, Tobaceo is grown in forty-two States and Territories, but nearly half the crop comes from Kentucky, Virginia, Ohio, North Corolina, Ten nessee, Pennsylvania and Connects cut.