g£ TEACHING WILD INDIANS. j| In 1892 the "Seger" school was built in Oklahoma Territory, among a colony of Cheyennes and Arapahoes, considered among the wildest, most backward and non-progressive of all the Indians. Fortunately, says the Chicago Record, the Superintendent of the new school—Mr. John Seger— had already gained their confidence in another capacity, so that when they were asked to put their children in school they said that they would as soon as they were weaned, And they carried this out literally. Many incidents are told illustrating the splendid work which has already been accomplished directly and in directly by the school, for often the influence in the community is equal to the actual amount of education within the school walls. TYPES OF INDIAN STUDENTS. One of the girl pupils who entered t the school when it opened lias had ] quite a remarkable record. Having < no previous education and leaving her < really savage home for the tirst time, .she has demonstrated what education < is doing and will do for the red man. < There is a system in nearly all the i Oovernment Indian schools by which i those pupils who are both industrious i nnd frugal may earn money in the 1 sewing room, on the farm or in some ' one of the school's other industrial de- 1 part men ts. Of course this must be < outside of their regular work. This 1 young girl, after taking a regular i course as a scholar, was judged capa ble of receiving a salaried position. In the course of a short time she filled not one, but several, and worked in the sewing room besides. Out of Uer savings she bought a wagon, harness, team, organ, bedroom set and a sew ing machine, all in view of her pros pective marriage to a young Indian to whom she was engaged, and when they were married she took enough savings with her to build a home! All this was accomplished in three years' time. LIVINC ANIMALS FOR JEWELRY. New Fuslilon in Pari# lise» Live Tortol»es For Ornaments. The new "living jewelry" is all the rage in Paris. In a show window of a prominent jeweler on the Rue Royale there are a number of tiny toises imbedded in jewels and crawl ing about on plush cushions. The tortoises are from one-third to one-half of an inch long without the head. Their shells are covered with an ornament of filigree gold in which is set a number of precious stones. The little animals are in no way in commoded by their ornaments. To i NEW LIVING JEWELRY. he shell is attached a tiny gold chain iat can be pinned on the corsage by safety pin. The illustration represents one of ese ornaments. It is a tortoise cov .red with a fine trellis work of red diamonds and brilliants in Louis Quinze style. Some are ornamented with brilliants and rubies, others with turquoises anil emeralds. In some the stones are set in the shape of a monogram. When not exhibited on their plush background in the shop windows the animals are allowed to crawl around in a little doll garden in the store, which is planted with real shrubs and has a rustic bridge and gravel walks. HUGE CLOBE FOR PARIS EXPOSITION To Meagnre El|rlity-four Feet in IJlttine tor, und Will Slowly Kcvolve. The great globe which is to be the feature of the Paris Exposition is now nearly completed. Elevators and stairways will run to nine tiers or floors, from each of which a section of the globe can be seen. It will thus be possible to follow the equatorial cir cles and make a thorough study of the earth's surface. The globe is being built by T. Rud diman Johnson on a scale of 1 in 500,- 000 of the actual size of the earth, or roughly, one-eighth of an inch to the mile. It will measure eighty-four feet in diameter, and have a surface area of 22,000. Some idea of the vastuess of the work is conveyed by the fact that if the material composing the cov ering were unrolled it would form a band one foot in width and four miles in length. In order that the globe GREAT GLOBE FOll PAULS EXPOSITION'. may be properly inspected it will be surrounded by a circular wall, round which will run a series of galleries. The globe itself will revolve slowly, thus permitting the spectator to view every part. Every place of any note will be given and all towns of 5000 inhabi tants, while larger towns will be marked according to scale. Various colors will bo employed to distinguish between sea and land, forest and des ert, while every zone will have a dif ferent shade. Underground Sanitation. It is declared in London that the health of employes on the Under ground Railway is better than on any line in England. The atmosphere is said to have positively cured cases of quinsy and bronchitis and to have benefited people with lung troubles. Cottof a Cavalryman. I The cost of maintaining a cavalry j soldier and horse in the British army ' is about SSOO per annum BEST-PAID WOMAN OFFICIAL. Hiss Mary Kirk Get* SIBOO a Year Foi Translation; Portuguese. The highest salary drawn by auj women clerk in Uncle Sam's omploj is SIBOO per annum, which is paid tc MISS MARY KIItK. Miss Mary Kirk, translator of Portu guese in the Bureau of American Re publics at Washington. Merit is re sponsible for Miss Kirk's distinction. She was born in Philadelphia, and, after graduating at Swarthmore Col lege, she went to Brazil to become professor of languages in a girls' col lege at Bio Janeiro. She returned to the United States as translator for the Brazilian Minister at Washington, and lately assumed her present position. The Diet of Ostriches. The omnivorous qualities of tho ostrich have hardly been exaggerated. It swallows oranges, small turtles, fowls, kittens and bones. Mr. Sehreiner tells of one swallowing also a box of peaches, tenuis balls, several yards of fencing wire and half a dozen cartrif' 'es. One followed the work men and picked up the wire as they cut it. Most frequently the ostrich does not follow each dainty separately, but collects several in its throat and then swallows them all at once. Some times it is strangled. Its windpipe is then cut. the obstacle taken out, and the wound sewed up, when all goes well again. Household Words. The Old Allien House Still Stands. The old Alden house at Duxbury, Mass., built in 1G53, still stands, ap parently as solid as when John and Priscilla Alden occupied it. Further more, there lives therein a veritable Priscilla Mullins Alden, a lassio of eleven years, who is the ninth genera tion from the original Priscilla Mul lins, who became Priscilla Alden. There are many others of the direct descendants of the original Pilgrims living thereabouts to-day. Dm Killed More Than 4000 Ueer. Jeff Watts, the king of deer killers in the Ozark country of Missouri, ha gone with a party of his Webster County frieuds* on a hunting trip to the Leatherwood Mountains in Arkan sas. Watts had over 4000 deer to his score several years ago. He is one of the most successful hunters in the Union. Utilizing Seaweed. Norway is utilizing seaweed for the production of glue, starch and soap after the extraction of the iodine the weed contains. A sizing for paper is also procured by the process. The glue, or rather the acid precipitate which forms it, is, when refined, an excellent substitute l'or gum arabic. He Spoke From Experience. "Colouel"Fiegel, do you think ther« ! is any money in horse racing?" "Yes, indeed! All mine i»."—New I York Times. fARM Corn Cobs for Kindling. Corn cobs are often used for kind ling tires. But while they light easily, the cob being solid does not create a draught of air and the fire soon goes out. Finely split kindling is much better, as it gives more heat, and thus sets tire to the heavier wood. But if dipped in kerosene and placed under the wood, the cob will furnish heat enough to light dry wood in large pieces without using any other kind ling. It is the only way in which kero sene oil can be used with safety in lighting fires. Utilizing; Inculmtor ICgga. Eggs are expensive food for chick ens, but when an incubator is used the clear ones are sometimes given as food, but usually cooked hard. This is a mistake. The Lest mode of feed ing eggs to chickens is to pour boil ing water on the eggs, beat them, and thicken the mess to a stiff dough with corn meal. Fed in this manner con stipation will be avoided, but they should not be used oftener thau every other day, giving them at night. Hard boiled eggs are excellent, but they are usually fed too liberally and cause bowel disease.—Farm News. Hog* in Small I.ots. It is neither profitable nor always entirely safe to keep great numbers of hogs together. Besides the liability to disease getting among them, there is always a certainty that the stronger will crowd the weaker from their feed ing places, so that inequality in size will increase instead of decreasing. In every litter there are always one or two weaklings that were born runts, and unless given a better chance than their fellows, they will always remain runts. The best way to manage this is when the pigs are seven or eight weeks old, take out the stronger ones aud wean them, giving them plenty of the best food that can be got to make growth. Then the runts left to suckle the sow alone will in two or three weeks more take a start that may make them as good as the others, so that in later life all can be fed to gether. No other feed, without the sow's milk, will do this, though such other feed should be given and the pigs be encouraged to eat all they can be made to eat. Providing Winter Cows. Many fanners who would like to breed cows so as to have them farrow in the early fall are unable to do so, because it is ditlicult to get a cow which is giving milk to coine in heat at this season. It does not pay to dry off the cow, in which case she would come in heat quickly enough, but might be come too fat to breed well. The bet ter way is to feed extra with oats, wheat brau and middlings mixed with ground rve. If this rye lias got some ergot in it there will be no trouble about the cow coming in heat. liye in any form has the effect of increasing prolificacy in all animals that will eat it. There are many advantages iu having calves dropped iu the fall, pro vided there are warm quarters for them the first winter. They will make the best winter cows, as they will naturally come in heat when a lit tle more than a y ar old, and may be bred then. Spring calves also coming in heat in the spring make cows which will give the bulk of their milk during the summer, when milk and all dairy products are cheapest.—Boston Culti vator. Tlio Sex of KRKS, There are many theories regarding the hatchiug of eggrf—i. e. the sex. Some claim that round smooth eggs will produce pullets; others that the position of air space much to do with the sex, etc.; but these are inerlv theories—not a fact iu the lot. One of these theories might seam to give good results one season, only to be reversed the next. There is room for much experiment on this line. The male bird has much to do with it —cockerels mated with two-year old hens and cocks mated with yearling hens. In our opinion the individuality of the male bird is all important. The stronger this in dividuality the mora male birds will be the result. In special matings or double matings for show birds thin has often been commented upon. We believe that this question will never be settled, for the simple reason that hens have as strong individual quali ties as cocks, and while a strong cock might influence a majority of his get, yet the minority, due to stroug indiv idual hens, will always be present. While experiments along this line will be profitable, yet it is idle for the average poultrymeu to thus employ himself. We do uot believe we will ever be able to mate so as to produce either all pullets or all cockerels.— Agricultural Epitoinists. Success With Home Made Fertilizers. For nearly 40 years I have been the occupant of a rough, sidehill New England dairy farm, writes "A Vet eran." Iran iu debt almost wholly for it, having hardly means to stock it «ud buy the necessary teams and tools. And after all these years, I must say j one of the greatest sources of pleasure . has been in clearing land of stones • and bushes, and increasing its pro- j ductiou fourfold. I well remember i the pleasure given me by the first crop of hay taken from a niuc-acre field of 24 good two-horse loads, this from a rough hilltop pasture without commercial fertilizer, audit is to day a productive field, adding much to the beauty of the landscape. This is but one of a number of fields that have responded bountifully to the ap plication of homemade fertilizers, I reoallect one crop of corn producing over 200 bushel of ears per acre with homemade fertilizer, with a very little phosphate applied in the hill aud clover turned under. For composting manure, I have found nothing equal to dry soil, often taken from the roadside, where it has washed from tho road bed, and is of little value to use again as road ma terial. A friend of mine made a prac tice of storing a large quantity in the dry season and using it as an absor bent behind his cows during the stab ling season. The results were two heavy crops of grass aud rowenin one season. I use horse manure, sawdust aud dry waste material in the trenches behind the cows, as absorbents of the urine. This greatly increases the quantity of manure,with gooil results. The live farmer who enjoys his calling with eyes open, will discover sources of supply to increase the manure pile in fallen leaves, in the wild ferns iu pastures, in swamp grass to be gath ered and used for bedding for cattle, horses and swine. Much fertilizer is lost by allowing the waste from farm building to run in the same channels year after year, which should be turned iu new channels, thus enrich ing now parts of the fields.-—New England Homestead. I'oultiy Notes. Good laving hens are neither hun gry nor too fat. The large breeds, as a rule are the best for the table. Reduce the winter stock of poultry to layers as much as possible. Use carbolic acid occasionally in the dust bath, to destroy the lice. The best plan is to give a good va riety of both cooked and dry food. Paralysis in chickens is often due to overfeeding and lack of exercise. Wheat, corn and buckwhat fed to fattening fowls will whiten the flesh. It is often a good plan to feed corn on the cob and let the fowls do the shelling. So far as possible in feeding,scatter the grain so that the whole flock" will hold an equal chance. Well fed fowls rarely become Over fat when they are compelled to scratch among litter for their grain. The w inter care of fowls is an easier matter thau the summer because there is less liability of disease. liens will not lay when their combs are frosted. This is one reason why warm, dry quarters are necessary. Never try to stimulate egg produc tion with irritating condiments, as they usually do more harm than good. Hardiness, vitality and vigor of constitution are of more importance in poultry for profit thau all other qualities combined. It is unreasonable to expect hens to lay in winter under adverse condi tions. They require more food than at other times because a large per centage goes toward supplying ani mal heat to keep up their physical condition. Poultry iu yards would give better returns than if on a rauge if properly managed, but to give a small flock the proper attention would cost too much labor. This is not counted when tho flock is kept for pleast.re, but on the farm the case is different. It is found that when charcoal is added to the food of fattening turkeys they gain more rapidly. When crowded, a portion of the food is li able to ferment in the gizzard. Char coal absorbs gases and relieves acid ity, and to this property of the char coal the benefits are due. Herding Sheep (iood for Consumpt'ves. Another class of men who watch sheep are those who do it for their health. Dozens of men claim to have been cured of consumption simply by putting iu several months at watching sheep. The work gives what is most required in the deadly disease —plenty of fresh air, moderate exercise, and employment that is not wearing on the brain, but is still enough to keep it occupied and prevent nervousness. Of course, if a mau has plenty of money,he can get these without herd ing sheep, but there are many men who need them badly who have no money, and all who have taken advan tage of this knowledge have surely been benefited. A number of men who have taken up sheep herding have become so fasciuated with it that they have stuck to it long after they got over the trouble.—Providence Journal. Captain Brown of the British ship Windward has spent forty years sail ing in the Arctic seas. He began on a whaler when twelve years old, and has been in the polar seas oftener probably than any other man. A TEMPERANCE COLUMN. THE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST IN MANY WAYS. What Temperance Brines—Pledge the Young—The Stimltir-Scliool an Efficient Instrument 1o Rave Our Youth From the Awful Evils of Intemperance. More of food than we can tell; More to buy with, more to sell; More of comfort, less of care; More to eat, and more to wear; (lappler homes with faces brighter. All our bnrdons rendered lighter. Conscience clean and mind much stronger, Debts much shortor, purses longer; Hopes that drive away all sorrow. And something laid up for to-morrow. Pledge the Young'. The dangers which threaten our youth call for vigorous and earnest work to save them. In our large cities boys between the ages of eight and ilfteen are especially exposed to the temptations of drinking habits; arrests for drunkenness among those of tender years are becoming fre rment. More than one-fifth of the boys ol the nation are hastening with quick steps to All up the ranks of the perishing drunk ards. The hundreds of ragged youth in the cities with the marks of the curso now upon them appeal for help. But how shall we reach and prevent others from following in their path? Our public school system offers no solution for this problem. The family relation, effec tive though it might be, proves itsell Inefficient to master the situation; for boys will use liquor for years without the knowl edge of their parents, or with the consont of their oxample. In the Sunday-school, however, may be found an efficient and powerful instru mentality. Here temperance may be pressed upon the youngest consciences with all the sacred force of religion added. Indeed, If God's word is taught, if sin le condemned, and righteousness upheld, the principle of total abstinenco will be in culcated, for how can a teacher with any conscience bo content to point out the locations of cities and towns in Palestlno, or tell the depths of the Dead Sea, and not iloelaro the law of temperance and point out the pitfalls which are right about the young? Intempornneo can be denounced as a sin against God and man. As Hamilcar led young Hani ibal to the altar, caused him tc lay Ills ehili>-liands upon the holy things and swear taat as long as he lived he would be tho enemy of Rome, so the Sabbath school teacher can pledge these youthful ones to eternal hatred of alcoholic drink. If the church is to win and keep the chil dren for Christ, this must be done. Tho church must get Into close grip with the wolf in the shape of the liquor traffic il the lambs of the (lock are to be saved from lestruction. The cause of feartiil leakage In church membership and the devil's great snglne of the bodies and soul of countless thousands must Itself be destroyed, and the church must do it by temperance teaching in the Sabbath-school and pledging the young to total abstinenco. If the fathers and mothers of the boys and girls of to-morrow, who are now in our Sabbath-schools, are thus pledged, a ruce of children will bo "well born' with healthy bodies and clean souls.— National Tomperauce Advocate. Temperance n Physiological Necessity. In like manner the influence of all drug? which affect the nervous system must be in ! the direction of disintegration. Tho healthy mind stands in clear and normal relations with nature. It feels pain as pain. It feel? action as pleasure. Tho drug which con i coals pain or gives false pleasure when I pleasure docs not exist, forces a lie upon ' tho nervous system. Tho drug which dis poses to reverie rather than to work, which makes us feel well when we are not well, 1 destroys the sanity of life. All stimulants, ; narcotics, tonics, which nffeet tho nervous j *ystom iu whatever way, reduce the truth- I fulness of sensation, thought, and action. I Toward insanity all such Influences lead; | and their effect, slight though It be, Is ot tho same nature as mania. The man who 1 would see clearly, think truthfully, and act j effectively, must avoid them all. Emer j geney aside, he can not safely force upon his nervous system oven tho smallest false | hood. And here lies the one great unans ! werable argument for total abstinence; not i abstinenco from alcohol aloue, but from all nerve poisons and emotionnl excesses, j \ppleton\s Popular Sclonce Monthly. One of the Deadliest Evils. The use or misuse of alcoholic liquors I? ' ono of the deadliest evils of tho times. I Consumption in the United States in the ' llseal year 1H9(! was 1,170,8711,44S gallons, or 1<>.42 gallons per head of the entire popula i tion. One gallon per head yearly is of dls : tilled spirits. Iu 1823 tho quantity wasseven j and a half gallons per head. Four hundred thousand confirmed drunkards were in the ' land, and millions more were inthemuk ! ing. English rumholes no longer advertise I ilrunkenuess for a penny, blind drunken ness for twopence and straw on which to sleep off debnueh for nothing. Moral senti ment will not tolerate intoxication in good society, business circles or responsible ; posts of duty. "Not a tithe of intemper ance," Dr. Dorchoster declares, "exists as : compared with llfty years and more ago." Nor Is it likely .to devastate as wide an area ! In future. Tho nature of stimulants and I lrugs and their terrible effects upon body, j soul, culture, social condition and religion ! ure better understood than in the past.— : Chicago Record. A Man With a "Hi®*." I The full court of Victoria has decided ! that a man with a "bias" against the liquor i traffic cannot sit on tho Licensing Benah. ; for tho same reason, then, we suppose ! that a man with a "bias'' against burglary ' ar murder should not be allowed to sit in I the Supremo Court, as the proceedings of j the SupremoCourt should certainly lie kept i is free from suspicion as tho proceedings | of the Licensing Court, j But if the teetotaler is barred from sit ting on the Licensing Board by rea.son of | his "bias" agaiust drink, must not the I drinker be barred by reason of his "bias' i in its favor, as a momont's reflection will ! show that the mun who likes hi* liquor, and takes it every day, whether he is a Su preme Court Judge, a Licensing mngis - trate or an ordinary citizen, is necessarily I prejudiced In its favor. , If those men with an opinion either for I or against tho drink arc barred from alt | ting on the bench, who then will occupy that seat? Idiots! Idiots only!— National i Advocate. Then and Nov*. For more I ban ton years Cambridge has voted "no license," so that there uro no open saloons uroifnd Harvard. In tho llrst years of the University, 250 years ago,when money was scarce, payment of tuition wa9 allowed In produce, bear-skins and live jtock. A "rundlot of sack" (keg of wine) was good for a year's tuition. Tho llmos have certainly changed. An Injury and ft Detriment. Alcoholio stimulants t.re not at all neces sary, but, on the contrary, are Injurious | and a detriment to tfeosn undergoing great : exposure or strain. Doctor Nanson, on his I expedition to the North Pole, took nostim ; oiants with him. His testimony Is that 'stimulants, with the exception of ohoco late, which to mild in ::ts effect nnd at the same time nourishing, liring practically no nntrltlve snbetanco Into the body, and tho snergy which one obtains by their uso at ! one moment must b-i plid for braeorre- I exhaustion at the next.'* On* of i the champion cyclists of Scotland said: I 'Only a temperate man can be a good ;acer. Anyone who uses brandv'or whisky | is soon broken-winded or Duffed."