I THE BONES OF COLUMBUS. | Mystery Enshrouds the Final Resting Place of the Great Discoverer. Mystery and secrecy surround the oxhumation in Havana, Cuba, of the remains of Columbus, and this fact has given rise to grave rumors, whioh appear to have some foundation, as there has been no attempt at denial from any source. The removal of the remains was effected behind the closed doors of the Cathedral, which were guarded by an armed forced. Few of the authorities were present, the uames of those who were to attend be ing handed to the Chief of Police the night before in General Blauco's own handwriting. No official account of the ceremony or statement regarding t' condition of the remains has been e public, but it has leaked out from aa authori tative source that they are not in the same condition as when they were placed in the niche. When the remains were placed in the mausoleum a small cask t was en closed, containing coins, gold and silver medals, precious stones and rolls of parchment, as was then the custom upon the occasion of a burial. It appears that this casket had been tampered with and rifled of its con tents, and further rumors say that only portions of the remains are left. Gossip and speculation are rife, the exact truth of which the authorities make 110 effort to affirm or contradict. A. quasi-official explanation, however, is to the effect that secrecy was given # It 1 ( j TOMB OF COLUMBUS IN THE CATHEDRAL AT HAVANA. to the ceremony because a cable dis patch received reported that General Toral had been murdered in Madrid the day before, and fears were enter tained that disorders might occur if the public aud military came together in great numbers. Some of the more rabid Spaniards goto the length of saying that the ■whole ceremony was a farce, the Washington Government having ob jected to the removal of the remains and their Government going through the pantomime in order to make the public believe that the remains, which really are left there, were shipped to Spain. Spain's pitiful appeal to be permit- VIAL CONTAINING THE ASIIF.S or COLUM BUS AT GENuA, ITALY. ted to remove the bones of Christo pher Columbus from Havana to Madrid will likely be passed upon by the Paris ppace commissioners, but before any discussion is reached four nations will become involved in the controversy. The four nations not only claim the right to posses the remains of Lhc great discoverer, but they assert that they already have them and are pre pared to back up the assertion with all sorts at proof. There is a quartet of Columbian graves in different parts 112 I W (?ij; Saint*, a Forceful Character. Lorenzo Suow, the newly chosen President of the Latter Day Saints, is on* of the most forceful characters ia Mormondom. He is an Ohioan by birth, and, strange to say, is a product of tbe famous Oberlin College, the alma mater of so many distinguished men before him. Mr. Snow had heard of the Mormons and was first intro duced into their circle by a visit to his sisters at Kirtland, Ohio, which was then a Mormon centre. He became convinced that the book of Mormou was the truth, and, being a man of decided character, he determined to give up his life to the cause. As a missionary in the Mormon religion he traveled at home and abroad, and his labors were always successful. There is scarcely a place in the U,nited States which he has not visited on his errand of proselyting,and he has been a mem / ilx x LoRErNZc SNoW ber of the Morruan faith from the earli est days, when the celebrated Zion in Missouri was the hope of the followers of Joe Smith. Elder Snow is truly an elder. He is now eighty-four years old,but in perfect health aud possesssd of all the keen mental facilities that are requisite for a leadership of the Mormon Church. The Killing of Lieutenant Wansboro. Close in front of me a slight and boyish lieutenant compelled my atten tion by his persistent aud reckless gallantry. Whenever a man was hit he would dart to his assistance regard less of the fire that this exposure in evitably drew. Suddenly he sprang to his feet gazing intently into the village, but what he saw we never knew, for he was instantly shot through the heart and fell over back ward, clutching at the air. I followed the nieu who carried him to the road aud asked them his name. "Second Lieutenant Wansboro, sir, of the Seventh Infantry, and you will never see his better. He fought like a lit tle tiger." A few convulsive gasps and the poor boy was dead, and as we laid him in a shady spot by the side of the road the sergeant reverently drew a handkerchief over his face and said, "Good-by, Lieutenant, you were a brave little officer, and you died like a true soldier." Who would wish a better end.—A. H. Lee, R. A., British Military Attache, in Scribner's. A I>lno*i»ur» Sixty Feet L.on£. Remains of the largest reptiles that ever lived were discoved in large num bers recently by Mr. Lambe, F. G. S., of the Geological Survey of Can ada. Mr. Lambe spent two months in the Red Deer district, north of Med icine Hat, in the Northwest Territories of Canada, and as a result has secured some splendid fossil remains. The fossils are the remains of dinosaurs found in the cretaceous rocks. The dinosaurs were reptiles varying from twenty to sixty feet in length. Some of them had three horns, one over the nose, the others near the eyes. They were either herbivorous or carnivorous, and existed ages be fore the mastodons. Mr. Lambe also discovered the remains of turtles, alli gators and fish. In removing the fos sils from the rocks great care had to be exercised, as the remains are exceed ingly heavy, and the work of getting them to cump was slow and laborious. The embroidered coat worn by a Frenoh academician costs $125, the white cloth waistcoat st> and the striped trousers sl7. The plumed hat aud box are down for $52 and the sword, with scabbard, for sl2. Total, $172. , There's Always a Way. Shipwrecked Mariner—"This pad dlin' with my hands is slow! I'll never reach port this way." "Wasn't I a chnmp not to think o* that before?"