GA=C, BiG tayal Sport Unjoved by the Guests of an Indian Prince, In the C entitled ‘After and India,” written by Karr. Mr. Karr was Maharaja of Kuch Dohar country, an hunt from elephant The Maharaja o neh Bince his stud of el Wav, and parative! shon entury there 18 (Cra Big 1 eribes an He Beha youth has always had al ty ’ sSpeaging y Iravers r, ANU generally distinguish over the toy the reeds the position of the beating line in the far r an occasional shoutand theshrill trumpet of an elephant. In the by the constant flapping of the elep! distinguish tl approach ' dd} distance, and gea oss, broken only i BGG ma ears, one can h and wild animals nar fr nt, Stand loaded in next gun get the shot? in expectation, with gr heart beatin moment of elephants | or AS y the at sight ways fired AS He foun upon up Feast Sometimes the clean, eoft { carried for the purpose 1 I the too nove that blur on that so vexes the wearer any denomination, but ne new will, if used in place linen make the lens like crystal in a moment The action may look like vulgar os tentation of wealth, but it costs noth ing afterall. —New York Mail an d Ex ni eee ball « SCROFULA CURED Hood's Sarsaparilla Just Was Needed. +1 have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for serofula troubles and it has given me relief f find it driv it is just what is needed when es away that tired feeling an 1 the system {s run down. I gladly recommend Hoc d's.” Cuanres A. Baxer, Little Utiea, New York. Hood’s *5anin parilla {2 the best—in fact the One True Riood Parifier Hood's Pills cure all liver ills. 25 cents. CAUGHT ON THLE PILOT, {hrillingand Remarkable Nxperience of a Denver Wheelman Louis dally receiving letter Riethmann, a Denver bi I what make whee unwonted ae { comes as the perience he hac lis friend from Indlanap L.oul | nlong beyond oti, and abot the return Unlon Pacliic, they heard the tril journ I cowcatcher that poin here the 3 hand i of the engine an OL the hiey Riethmann safely on the peri ol wits astry How to Prolong Life Ws age, 8¢ 1 Rich, 5 8 ial canses ij nin War mental and liseasot are investi rigin of degenerative organio changes ending to premature degeneration and decay are questioned, the ut that by the person in it, 80 subtle 1 its influence, is at the root of the ev organic rated, the more closely the 3 ' more closely {oes it coma his al implicated really commenca When old age has final ita march toward layed by J ] attention onservation Ly whiel Detection title of a » the CCheml A mixture of acety ir becomes explosive when a "4 »s 1 rye “ye of the gus Is present, sh 1 areve fo ox nlode peraiats 13g and the tenGenay o explode pereists up ightv-one per cent, This range is v wide and exceeds that { bustible gas Known ofl any Cot EE ————— sofel Love Letters, known, says a contempo- mary, that, when the petals of great Laurel Magnolla are tonched, however lightly, the result is a brown spot, which develops in a few hours The fact is taken advantage of by the American lover, who pulls a magnolia flower, and on one of its pure white petals writes a motto or essa zo a sharp pointed pencil Then flower, the young lady puts it in & vase of water, and in three or four hours the message written on the leaf becomes perfectly visible, and | reining 80 It 1s well the South with he sends the as she looks.” so deeply upon woman “abundance and beauty; that every woman is hair in all its original or, that being denied she longs to attain possessed. Ayers by simply aiding nutrition necessary It does this the hair HUNTING THE JAGUAR. A ROYAL THAT 1S The Natives Use Only a Short § Kill the Tiger—A stabbing - Spear to Ferocious South Pluch American ky Ind Exploit, is { r with rd motion, Terife loose } hy * ast 1t 1 i In an ecstasy of 4 : in the tiger's face A surprise the beast threw np his hea and shoulders, and pawed insanely at the cloth. In theeatching of a breath Terife aimed the upraised spear atthe rounded yellow throat, and drove it home, Tiger and spear rolled in the dost together, the blood spurting over the spear-shaft and staining the narrow trail. The king of the Cordilieras was conquered. He died as he had lived, flerce, cruel, with no abatement of his splendid courage. sil Eavade, Married Seventy Years, On May 4th the Bev. Andrew Pat rick and his wife, Olivia, of Grays, Knox County, Kentucky, had been mar ied exactly seventy-two years. Both are in good health and in enjoy- i ment of all their faculties, He is ninety-two years old and she is eighty- six. He has living descendants in the | fifth generation. Mr. Patrick was born in North Carolina in 1805, and at an early age he moved to Tennessee. At Elk | River, that state, he met his wife, then | Olivia Minor, and they were married | when she was a little less than fifteen | years old. Thirteen children were born to Mr. Patrick and his wife, six boys and % i Pick Vincent sneh ethnolo 3 fr i a Cen Asin, that three fundamental types which intermingled, ind ean Northern {0 there were black, white aeatite red over thi forming, in course of time, seventy-two distin races of human beings The world 18 waiting for another apinion. ® and and yellow, world and In A ————————————— A——— A Happy Family, The Grand Union Tea Store at Willimantic, Conn., has a very inter: esting family in one of consisting of a ta show win- cat which is rel. The mother eat bestows ns much motherly affection upon the squirrel as upon her own offspring. All three are sucklings and about half grown, and the squirrel romps and tumbles with his unnatural brothers. The family are the property of N. W, French, whose son caught the squir- rel about six weeks ago, at that time He put it at once with the old cat, whose kittens were The adoption was without protest, and no family discord has yet arisen. —New York Telegram. : i isi An Arkansas man the other day @o to ail for debt. By a mountain tly nto \ red he blast suntain of powder were pl pow ler were located to be The ack powder ignites slower than the giant powder, and the effect, when electricity was applied to both at once, was first to lift up the mass and then £10 while rock £7 biack aoed, 1 giant £1 ti 1 IIAsR moved, weighing an estimated 150,000 tons, was thrown exactly as the engi neers had planned. To spare the rod and spoil the child ja a subject for discussion before the School Board in Atlanta as it is in Milwaukee. In the Southern city the sentiment among the board members abolished in the high schools. When a boy is old enough to attend such a school, several of the members say, he jx old enoagh to behave himself with- out fear of the strap, and old enough, foo, to warrant being sent to the po- needs other discipline than moral sua- sion. As to the rod in the grammar schools, however, opinions differ, and the decision on this phase of the ques- tion awaits further investigation. A prominent member of the board says that teachers need to be trained how 3 na ihe fo disaj . ihsequent target ithe nld strike ie points Most Yniner- s war with doabi devas For marine battery would prove of inestimable advantage. lemente harbor Nature's Balance Destroyed. Through ignorance or blindness the nice balance which nature has provid. ed has been destroyed and great waves of insect pests sweep over the country, eating everything green in their path. The destruction of birds has inter- fered with the delicate operations of the laws of nature. Andubon states that a woodeock will eat its own weighs in insects in a day, and many other birds are equally ravenous in their ap« petite. Although the English spar- row, because of their quarrelsome habits, have aroused =o much dislike, they were introduced at a time when other birds were rapidly decreasing in number. Their wonderful multiplica- tion in the past twenty years has probe ably been the means of saving millions | of dollars worth of crops. It is un- | wise policy to kill toads, lizards, and | friendly insects. It is considered that | the latter destroy many more noxious | insects even than the birds. formally abolished. the Jritish government, in round num- bers. $3.000.000 annually. Of this —————————— SAAN A mile of railway permanent way, i with two sets of rails, takes up two aud one-half acres of land.