:E GREAT SETTING t. OF EVERLASTING HILLS. I)Y 1IAYDEN CAR RUTH. SRI .rt VEN in theuncon ventional West, the freedom with which the deni tens of the place came into the of flee and pied tho type was some thins rather re markahlo. Colo- I CJ 1 .... UVl D1UUUUI C A ; t , pressed the opiu , Ik'J ion that we . tie it together bo it wouldn't i A touchy," and we really ' ggestion serious attention. " ash did not often disturb ''It his conversational dis ''' sometimes rather disoon- fl were forced to bear the "ta nnmerous stories, most residents being immune ,.' renetitions. His idea . be that nothing was too o-, especially after he had r of paying something on ition an adroit operation (ted in turning in a quar "' elderable flourish and bor- a dollar the next day. "' after having performed !.rt of this transaction, he .'..h Toot into the capacious i t nail told a story of one .-, a former moro or less 'i lident of the towui -I had r stories of Hendershot 5 tr. Bush and Abner Black ' am inoliued to think that ''' Ime existed. '"','jw, Hendershot was all Mr. Bash on the occasion ! "You know about Hen ,Ul, Hendershot, who used r:.,'eadqnarters Hotel? Hen id l, yea; quite a mau, Hen ,m.t. Couldn't toll you all irshot if I took n week ofT. ,,id all the money I lent . . " and he heavod a sigh lit. patlietio, as calmly no if row that I knew he never ley to anybody iu his life; il lontrary, owod mouey to (l,4 town. Hendershot was, with "jBeton some fool thing, ay, or lose it, or anything. igut of Hendorshot for a m', last night when I was a oti. item in your paper about inilgg old Doacou Brown of-eight inches iu diameter. I eight inohes in circuin "''( Mr. Bnsh never recog 'Liinor points of mere faot. "bink of Hendershot's old Everlasting. Everlast I l her full name, 'cause she ,'.(,'601, of more so. More , 'cause a yeurthqunke ' hill a good deal, but it f,'er move that old hen. eat any time laying eggs "n'i, Lor no other size, '1 ever hoard. Hor ob i. is settins. irred eggs to set on, bun ,ri:ft n t handy, wasn't above iiJ:. Next to real eggs, of iti take artificial ouob d'lhiua uesteggs. Seemed satisfaction out of 'em ' J,1d out of corncobs, or a "" ,k, or a briokbat. Next "j'lggs she cottoned to door- j, fust, . brindle if she irhite. Preferred 'em ou but, if necessary, could nko)he attempt to hatoh t oa the door, bracing one )o,iy, and squawking a good j,,Jl her throat if anybody ,loor. Powerful hand to .mijuawkl just like that i mi' her throat, if sho was It" ben she was sottiug. "o the back platform of u'': train one day and sot Mki bright head of a bolt. ' itako at the seotion sta- ' lud como bsck on the 'g on a chunk of coal iu Cyclone Mowed away the x1 but old Everlastiug just t; ground aud kept the "'" sue was sotting on safo n ost of tho feathers had ti' jOff by the force of the fln old Hendershot went Jttlf.iu death to aoe her jail to pat heron the back, rK. Irked down in her throat iiia dab at his hand which Jd. Gamiest hen iu the -ia b'iling volcaner had ,i.i.ie bank yard she'd ablis iui4 seltiag on tho stones it lii' old luia wasn't such a t in fter all. When she had '"( g three weeks without h '.'egn to got suspicious, ' look hard with one eye ;aok on the nost. Then wrli 5W8ek 'was up, she would ui'dit d leave whatover it ,yl't around for something Jgmeut was bad on tnak. Ifi but, she knowod when wuu along till that hen HoHt about everything in Inlue was getting pretty W.setting material. One ot was iu tho billiord a game with Judge ,A ue Wfts o-uurting the u(i"lko, down along the rail , it'"1'. wc" suddenly that ;r 6 speckled heu up and "dr with two squawks .(i,ks, saatohed a dabattbo u, fathered thera four balls tin.? tid sot down on 'em, lll(!iefos peaoeful, and be ill. fu deop and steady, as illy, 'Thank hoaving, at I'V.iod:' igM'ffnHt Hendershot was w'Tjiluiu says he: 'Bovs. Uive the hen a never stira for iio i--1 ' e pt ..n a day t get a rshit. he oouldn't i walkiug around t"" a hi ,0 lht - 9t ' , io rig up some on her. Offered 'in any other hen, an might provide tr nest and obina Everlasting ag'in tha others to fol low eaoh other. Finally offered to bet that the fowl would hatch out the billiard balls, red and white ivory ohickens, but everybody fit shy of even this offer, 'cause nobody knowed what the old spreckled thing couldn't do. Finally he give up, and on id he'd just make an exhibition set of it, and chalked down tho date ou the wall, and told strangers who dropped in that it was a grand set ng'in time, an attempt to lower the world's rec ord nuder the auspices of tho Inter national Setting Hen Association. "Along toward night, when Hen dorshot was standing aud admiring her, and pointing out that she hndn't moved a feather since she sot down, in come a sandy-haired feller with a red face, and wearing one of theso fore-and-aft caps, and funuy-looking olothes generally, and squinted his eyes around and seen tho hen, and said the feller: . " 'Ob, I my,' soys he, just like that 'oh, I say, you kuow, what's the bloorain' bird on the table for?' " 'She's a setting on four billiard balls,' answers Hendershot, proud as Lucifer. "'Extraordinary, by jovo!' pays the feller; 'does she think BUe cau hatoh 'em?' "'That's her ijeo. And I don't know but she might you hear wot I say?' says Hendershot, swotting up with pride. " 'Oh, I say, mow, sho'll soon get tired of that you know. Hons cau't hatoh out billiard balls.' " 'Bet you twenty-five dollars sho keeps trying for throo weoks anyhow,' answers Hendershot. " 'I'll go you on that, says the fel ler. " 'Bet yon fifty dollars she keeps at it the fourth week," says Hendershot. " 'Go you again,' says tho feller. " 'Bet you a hundred she holds out the fifth week,' keeps on Heudcrshot, getting excited. 'lake that, too,' comos Lack the feller. " 'All right,' said Hendershot; 'put up your money.' " 'Oh, I say. I'm not nsed to thnt, you know. Don t do that way in England, my dear sir. We're gentle men 1 11 just record it in my betting book, you know, and he pulls out a small book and looks along down the page and sort o' begins reading to his- self, like this: 'His Ugliness, fifty guineas on the sweepstake; Juke o: Uluckwater, a pony ou the Goodwoou cup; Lady Bink, box o' gloves,' add then he scratched down something, saying, 'Landlord, $175 ou hen.' "Well, Hendershot be caught right on, and he wasn't to be outdone, so says ho 'Of course that's all right, my lord both gentlemen certainly I'll just put it down in my betting book,' and he dragged out a copy of the Smith Patent Pill ComnanT's Farmers' and Meohanios' Acoount Book and mns his Anger down the page, sort o' talking to hisself 'The president, live hundred ou hoss trot; Chief Justice Supreme Court, $10 on dog tight,' and then he scratched down, 'Stray Englishman, $175 on Everlast ing Hills.' "Then soys the fellow: 'I'm ont on a littlo huuting trip think I'll just stay at your house.' Well, Hender shot was tickled to have him, and put him iu the best room iu the house, and gavo orders that nothing was too good for him. Aud he was just the kind that kuo wed good things, and be went right in and mode his self nt home had extra grub every meal, lively teams eaoh day to eta out hunting perahrio chickens, and all that kind o' thing aud run up a bill like tho national debt. But Heudor- shot was ticklod to death over it, and usocl to speud half his time ta kincr with tho feller 'bout the Jnkos and things he knowed iu England. Ana olil iverlastinnr mst sot on. Thsy left the wiudor opeu so sho could got out when she wanted to. It was aiways her way to hop off the nest just at sunrise every morning, and hustle around and pick up a handful or two of gravel aud be baok ou in ten miu ntes. Every morning before break fast Hendorshot took a look at her, aud during the day he had an eye on her most of the time. Fenced off that comer of the room so that she wouldn't be disturbed, and put np a shode so's the light wouldn't hurt her eyes. "Well, at tho eud of throe weeks Hendershot couldn't hardly contain hissoir, 'cause he'd won the first hot. 1 hat's og'in me, 'pou inv honor. says the Britisher, notiuor. it down in his book; 'but I'll win on the next week's,' aud ho civo his bill another h'ist. Once Hendershot presented his bill, but the Britisher waved it away sort o'graceful and said he'd fix it whou thoy settled tho bets. 'That's all right, my lord,' says Hendershot. au gentlemen; you know,' aud the Britisher boosted his livery bill again. "When tho fourth week ended the hen was still setting right along, and the Englishman owued up beat ag'in. "Sume way at tho end of the tifth week. Hendershot wus so tickled that he couldn't hardly talk. 'But I say, you ought to give me a chance for my reveuge,' says the Britisher; 'go you another weok for two hun dred.' 'Ail right,' says Hendershot. An.i he wou ag'in, I'll be hanged if ho didn't. 'Double the hot and you go ag'in,' says the Englishinau. 'Brit ish pluck, you know never say die.' Hendershot agreed, with some ro mark about tho Amerioun eagle. 'Tell you what,' says he to Judge Longs dorf, 'old Everlasting is just making the set of her life. Id's the billiard balls being bo natural, you see. Be ing nsed to oomoobs and chunks of bricks so long that a billiard bull gives her new hope. I'll go him one more week at 8300 if sho holds out and he'll do it.' "Well, she held ont all right enough, and the Britisher was ready to try it ag'in. 'England expects every man to do his duty,' says he. 'There you are, Mr. Landlord.' t "The eighth week woe up at four o clock a Thursday afternoon, and they'd agreed that it was to be the last. A few rainntes before four Hen dershot was walking shout pretty nervous, with one eye on old Ever lasting. " 'She's n-going to do it,' says he. 'She ain't moved a feather. She's right there. She's a-winuing money forme. To-night I'll give her a nest and thirteen eggs as her reward. Yes, sir; thirteen genyooiue eggs, you un derstand eggs that will hatch. She' the greatest fowl in the United Slatoi. I'll back old Everlasting Hills ag'in the world.' "J list then in walks the clovk, and says he: 'That Englishman left ou the ono o'clock train. Did ho pay his bill?' . " 'Great beeswax, no!' yells Hen dershot. 'Two hundred dollars, il it's a cent! Nor tha bet, ucithor! Yon blamed old speckled fraud!' and he rennhes over and gives tho hen a poke with tho billiard cno, and she rolls over with her fnet np. "Then Jndgo Longsdoif picks hei up aud she didn't weigh morn than six ounces. 'Why,' say he, 'she's got class eyes and wire in her neck. That fellor must 'a' been a taxider mist uud stuffed her about four weeks age I' . "Well, wheu Hendershot could stand up without help, ho said some things also without help but there's no usn of ray telling yon whnt they was, Vnnm thoy wasn't things you could print iu your paper, r.nd there's no sense iu your bothering with things you can't use. Just go almnd and make an editorial of this, and draw a moral on the sinfulness of betting if you want to, whii-h I've alwuy said it was, ever since I bet ag'in my own hosj and the critter got scared and run away and como iu ten rods ahead, which I'll tell yon about aomo other time," and he went out and left me to finish the articlo I was writing, urging people to dig deeper cycloue cellars. Saturday Eveuing Post. SOUTHERN STEEL. Heelnnlnff of mi Kiinrinnm Industry SU-rl Hull Mills to Follow Cotton HI I 111. The beginning of the manufacture of steel at Ensley, near Birmingham, Ala., recently is a striking and impor tant fact of great aigniticance for Southern inu'iRtiy. Three furnaces out of the ten that liavo been under oonstrnotiou began to make steel on Thanksgiving Day aud the other seveu are soon to be in operation. Where pig-iron can bo niado most cheaply, steel also can be made at least cost, so that we are now witnessing thu tfrst steps of a movement that means a vast development. Hitherto the South lias bcou pro ducing pig for sale to steelmakers in tho North. Mcch pig has ulso been exported to England aud other coun tries. The significance of tho event at Ensley is that it points to a time ot far distant when steel rails, armor for warships, steel ships, tinplute, structural shapes, etc., will be South ern products. Other stocliuaking plants are already, we are told, iu contemplation and sovoral rolling mills are building. Low cost of production is nowadays the controlling faotor in tho location of new industries. . It is the breeze thnt wafts the cottou manufacturing industry slowly from Now England to the Carolinas. It is tho beriuning thnt is difficult. After the first cot ton mills had shown tho way to suo cess, others followed in quick succes sion. So it may be expouted the suc cess of steel making at Euslny will have largo results. Baltimore Sun. Agriculture In the Klondike. Suoh of us as regard the Klouiiyke as a cheerless, arid waste of ice are surprised at the statement of -a resi dent of Dawson City, sent to Wash ington by Vioo Cousul Morrison: "Grain has doue exceptionally well, and I see no reason why it should not bo extensively aud successfully grown here. I see no reason why this coun try should not bo ablo to produce its own vegetables aud graius. The suc cess I have had with flowers proves tli at nil haroy auuttals will do well. The coming year I intend planting Beveral hundred hybrid roses; also Hummer flowering bulbs, a largo variety of other hardy and half-hardy uu nuals, and some of the hardy peren nials. Small fruits, suoh as straw berries, currants, blackberries aud raspborries, should do well. Currants, raspberries, cranberries, strawberries and blueberries grow wild here." VictorSmith, iu New Ycrk Press. l'oM 11115 For Iog' Com it. Seldom has a pug dog been buried with so much pomp aud espouse ui "Dude" Kogers, of Denver, Col., who had beeu Mrs. Jennie Rogers's constant companion for seventeen years. Mrs. Rogers said ho kuow an much as a child, that he had alwuys beeu treated like one, and that ho should be buried like one; so she sent for an undertaker to lay out his remains and measure him for a coffin. The casket, for its size, was the most expensive ever made in Dcnvor. It was of ma hogany, lined with silver, finished with silver trimmings, and cost $175, The body lay iu state iu Mrs. liogurs'd house for liulf a day, and lots of her friends came to make a farewoll call on Dude. Mrs. ltogers had Dude buried in tho garden back of her house. The gravo was terraaed up exactly like that of a baby and covered with roses. Vhen a Man's a Mir. Why do all uewspaper writers, wheu writiug of a uiarriago, say that the "oouplo were pronouucei'. inon and wife?" I admit that tho bride was not a wife until married; but was not the bridegroom, a man before be en tered the marriage stato? Siucerely, QCEIHST. No, no, no! Ask any woman. No male is more than half a mau until married. It requires matrimouy to round out his being. Iu aomo parts of tho country, when one man is in troduced to another, the first query is, "Glad to know yon; married mau or dog?" And the auawer is "Dog," if the one interrogated is a baohelor, and "Man," if he happen to have a wife. Victor Smith, in New York Press. Boars Uava riantjr or Ammunition. The quantity of ammunition stored in the Transvaal is absolutely oolos al, and would suffioe for ten years' war, even at the present rate of usage. SOME UNIQUE CALLINGS. ODD PURSUITS BY WHICH MEN CAIN A LIVINC. Converted a Hump nn Ills llnrk Into a . Ntpilnsstona to RuccAsft-klnttinnlly nf tha Parisians In Adopting Unear l'rofesslonsMat lllrml Out. The complexity of modern civiliza tion is shown in nothing morn strik ingly than in the extreme multiplicity of pursuits by which men to-day gain n living. In a country village whioh supports with difficulty a single baker or tailor, only the old-fashioned and indispensable trades are pursued; but in the great swarming centres of population like London and Paris, not only these, but a multitude of strauge, queer, out-of-the-way callings, which, eveu in towns of half a million or even a million inhabitants, would not give employment to a single hu man being, aro followed by scores and oven hundreds of men who derive therefrom not only the means of sub sistence, but in some cases au inde pendence aud even riches. Persons who aro familiar with tho history of popular delusions, which Poison once said jestingly that ho would write in a work of five hundred volumes, will remember tho famous stock-jobbing mania whioh raged in Paris under the inspiration of the Scotch projector aud financier, John Law. During the mania the great sceno of operations was the Hue (Juinquempoix. The business was by law confined to that spot, whither multitudes of men and womeu of nil ranks and conditions flocked to buy shares in Law's bank and Mississippi Company, which, though absolutely worthless, roso to twenty times their original price. X IIVMP THAT MAPS ITS OWNr.ll RICH. Desks and writing materials for the transfer of shares were in great de innud, but in street so deusely crowded they wero not easily obtain able. Iu this exigency a hunchbacked man let out his protuberanco for the infatuated speculators to scribble upon, and so eager were they to use it and bo liberally did they pay him that he is said to havo liiado iu a few days a hundred aud fifty thousand livres. It was a happy thought that led this man to convert an obstacle into a stepping-stone to success; it showed that though his person was crooked, his mind was straight. Hundreds of hunchbacked men would probably have seen the golden tide running by thorn for life without dreaming of thns profiting by it. Sinco Law's day Paris has boen pre-eminent for the odd pursuits aud callings of many of its citizens. Of all the great cities of tho world, it is the one iu which to-day the most ex traordiuary and surprising modes of gaining a living are employed. No where is keener ingenuity exeroisod in turning refuse to account than in this huge hive of industry, where literally notbiug is wasted. Out of the very leavings of the regular in dustries of the metropolis dirty rags, half-gnawed bones, mouldy crusts of bread, cigar cuds, parings and peel ings of fruits, pieces of squeezed lemon thrown aside by oyster eaters, pieces of glass, clippings of hair, etc. scores of shrewd men are continually realizing fortunes, and thousauds are getting their daily bread. Among the articles thus transformed by Parisian iugenuity aro faded flow ers that liuve been flung aside by tho benuties to whom they were presented. The discarded bouquets are collected daily from the dirt heaps of the city, are picked over, sorted, uud the onds of the stalks dipped into water nearly boiling, whtreby tho sap is made to mouut into the flowers, and they be come as brilliant as if .freshly picked. They are then mounted upon rush stems, arranged in bouquets, aud sur rounded with fresh greou leavos, after which they are sold by tidily dressed littlo girls who peranibulito the boulevards and press them upon the Parisians. FAINTINO AS A rROFESSIOJJ FOE WOMKN, Tho following incident shows au originality of invention rarely rivaled even by the prolific brain of the Yan kee. One day in a lawsuit before the Tribunal Correctionnel a handsome young lady, smartly drosEed, was callod as a witness. Tho presiding judge asked her name, and then her profession or calling. "I faiut," an swered madame in a very low tone. The judge thoreupon directed an offi cer of the court to bring her a chair nud allowed her to sit down. "Don't bo afraid, madame," said he; "and please to toll me before you are swoi n what is your profession?" "I um fainting," agaiu whispered the pretty witness in a barely audible voice. The gallant Vice-President uow sent for a glass of wator, whioh the lady sipped alowly, then bowing to her inter rogator she appeared to await further questions. Again, the third time, sho was i. i i . . . ... BH&eu uer proiessiou, wuen, witu a look of wouder and surprise, she re plied: "But, Mr. President, I havo already twice had the houor to tell you thai my profession is to faint. " "To faint!" exclaimed tho astonished nud puzzled Judge; "how cau that possibly be a profession?" Tho lady explained that Bhe gained her liveli hood by going every evening in a fashionable dress to a stall in the The atre do la Porte do Saiut Martin, aud there fainting, as though overpowered by the powerful and vivid uotiug nt the most critical and tragical moment in the play. Sho added that hor ser vices were considered iuvaluablo, aud that thus far sho had givou to tho manager complete satisfaction. HIRED OUTLETS AND GUARDIAN ANGELS. Wo have all heard of dross-ooats to let, of hired jowels, and eveu of hired wedding presents, but who ever heard of meat to let? Yet iu Paris the flue, appetizing joints of meat aud other eatables which are displayed iu the windows of tho cheaper restaurants are simply hired to tempt the passing epioure. There ore butchers who ro nlize a considerable income from lot ting out show joints, atuaotive legs of mutton and nicely trimmed cutlets, disposed with suoh Parisian art as to oatoh the eye of thu plebeian boil vi vant. Eveu clean liuen, also, is let out on hire, and it you suffer from uu exoess of blood, you oan hire leeches and have them set biting for a trifling sum. Among other odd ways of gaining a living in the French metropolis are, making soap bubbles, painting turkeys' feet, retailing lighted fuel, guessing riddles, collecting samples,, and act ing as g.iardian angel of only one of which, the last, have we space for an explanation. The guardian angel es tablishes himself in the outskirts of the oity near the wine shops, where he does odd jobs during the day for the shopkeeper, while in the evening he assists iu getting home any ol the sons of Bacchus who may have druuk too deeply. In doing this be must be deaf to all the oommands and entrea ties of his charge to let him enter any of the wine shops on the way; he must keep him ont of broils, guard his per sonal e (Toots, oven fight for him if nocessary, aud when ho cannot be led homo, carry hi.n ou his back or wheel him on a barrow. The earnings of these helpers of frail humanity are ridiculously paltry, seldom exceeding a frano or two a night. TUB EXPKRTNF.SS OK WIVR -TASTERS. One of the out-of-the-way modes of getting a living in London is that prac ticed by the wine-tasters of the Lon don docks. These persons, who are snpposed to havo palates of exquisite delicacy, with much knowledge of wiues, hang about the docks, where j they are hired by both dealers nud buyers to accompany thorn to the vaults and give their opinions of the various wiues submitted to them for examination. Though they carefully avoid swnllowing tho wine thoy taste, yet their calling slowly saps their health, and they become at au early age physical wrecks. Tho sensations which they cxperieuce in sampling tho wines are of the most delicate and subtle nature; it wai oue of these men who deteoted tho flavor of iron iu pipo of wino into which a shingle nail had fallen. Saturday Evouiug Post. Japan hisni. CURIOUS FACTS. has fifty sects of Budd- Tho watermelon grows wild all over Africa. Benares, India, was an ancient capital before Babylon or Ninevah were founded. Rhinoceros meat is something be tween pork and beef, and is not to be despised when no other flesh is to be obtained. Iu Harrodsburg, Ky., there is n mau who has a private coal mine that he uses as his fuel supply and will sell none. Haw eggs, milk and plenty of fruit are recommended for brain workers. The fruit corrects the bilious tendency of the milk and eggs. Tho largest tree in the world lies broken and petrified at the end of a defile in Northwestern Nevada. It is said to be 6l6 foot loug. With plenty of water and without solid food, a.horse will livo twenty-five days; with solid food and without water, he will live only five days. In the King of Saxony's museum at Dresden there is a cherry stone upon which, by the aid of a microscope, more than one hundred faces can be distinguished. The Indians of the interior of Bolivia wear shirts and hats made of the bark of a tree, which is Honked in water to soften tho fiber, nud then bealeu to make it pliable. Among tho Vosgcs peasants children born at the new moon are rupposed to have bettor hung tongues than others, aud those born at the last quarter to have keener reasoning powers. In all these years of tea drinking, tea has not beeu druuk at meals iu China. The wuter from which it is made is always freshly boiled and used as soon as it reaches the boiling point. Iu loelaud horses aro shod with sheep's horn. In the valley of the upper Oxus the antlers of tho moun tain deer are used for tho same pur pose, the shoes being fastened with bom pins. Dauoing eggs are Raid to be abundant iu Shasta County, California. The egg is laid by an unknown insect, on thu oak leaves, and whou it is mnturo it drops to the ground, where it dunces about as if aui nnted. Natural gas conveyed in bamboo tubes was utilized in China years bgo, aud ouo of their writers mentions boxes which repeated the sounds of (ersons' voices that were dead a machiuo similar to tho phouogrr.ph. ' A great many things that r.ro now used for food were onco considered poisonous by the Bomaus, who used them to scatter among their clothes aud keep away moths. It wan a bold man who first dared to cat a tomato or cook au eggplant. T:u;lniiit.'s Fiag In tho Snncttinry, A striking ceremony, liko those of tUn days of the Crusaders, was wit nessed at Canterbury, England, when a large company of tho East Kent liegimont, knowu as tho "Bull's," marched to the Cathedral escorting the regimental colors, which wero placed in the sauoluary. Dean Farrar accepted the onstody of the oolors, conducted tho impres sive ceremony aud addressed words of sympathy and encouragement to the soldiers, who wore about to sail for Africa. British regiments uo longor carry their precious colors in foreign wars, bnt deposit them iu thoir ' home churches. New York Journal. L'ntanltary Vomlltlun of I'aklii. The throo ohiof ' uhnraoteristioii of Pokin, thu Chiuaso enpituf, which most impress the newly arrived visi tor are dust, stench and dogs. There has beeu no rain fiucn Juno, and tho hideous tracks thnt nro dignified by tho titlo of streets nro nnkle deep iu black dust, much of which is pulver ized filth. A loug tho macadamizod streets, of which thoro nro throo, are opeu drains. Tiioso toi ve as sewers from which tho nownga is dipped and tho highway sprinkled. Whou it dries tho pulvoriziug la resumed, and, iu addition to the original compound, tho residuum of tho tainted wator is breathod into tho lungs. Correspon dence Now York Tri'ouno. Htray Iob la Xetr York Clly, The Sooiety for the Prevention ot Cruelty to Animah in Now York City picked up '23, dO(J wandering dogs in 13U8. Of theso 1511 wero restored to their loviug owners, and almost every one in a healluy oondition was adopted. Thousand wero killed be cause of disoaso. POPULAR kCIENCE. iio me recent tests bave brought lo light the fact that iodine occurs in cer tain articles of human food in small quantities, and as it occurs in flab and shell fish, it has recently been suggested that this fact may be the reason why fish is so valuable food for invalids. Traces of iodine have been found in eod-liver oil, and it ii possible that it, together with the bromine and phosphorus, contribulei to its tonie effects. Light travels .'ally 6,000,000,000, 000 miles in a year, and even the moKt modest guesses as to the parallax of Polnria make it thirty-five light years. Pritchard's estimate in 1887 was ninety light years, bnt he has sinoe modified his rlgnrM. Hence, if one will write two hundred and ten and add twelve ciphers thereto he will have the num ber of miles which the most conserva tive authorities believe intervene be tween the earth and the pole star. The deep sea is in total darkness, and plant life, according to Sir John Murray, is quite absent over ninety three per cent, of the ocean bottom. Fishes aud invertebrates, however, nro scattered over the floor of the ocean at all depths. The majority of these deep sea animals live by eating the mud, olay or ooze, or by catching the particles of organic matter falling from tho sarface. It is probable that three-fourths tf the deposits now cov ering tho floor of the ocean have passed through thu alimentary cauals of niariue auimals. CHRISTIAN jip TOPICS- JANUARU 14. In the Far Country. Luke xv. 11-24. From a recent investigation on the influence of pressure on milk, it ap pears that milk under a pressure of ten tons could be shipped a live or ten days' journey without fear of spoiling, but the cylinders capable of carrying such a pressure wonld prob ably weigh more than the milk. Great pressure applied for a short time greatly delayed souring. After a pressure of thirty tons for eight to twelve hours, milk will usually keep sweet three to five days, and after a pressure of forty tons at 123 degrees Fahrenheit for an hour, me.it kept iu good condition ior three mouths. Dr. E. W. Scripture described be fore the American Association for tho Advancement of Science the method of producing an KBtheBia by tho di rect application of an electrical cur rent without the application of drugs. An alternating current with eqnal positive and negative phases was made to traverse the nerve. At a proper frequency ot about 5,000 complete periods iu a seoond it oan be made to out off all sensatory communication by this nerve. Needles can be ruu iuto the part of the body supplied by this nerve without any pain being felt. As to the distance of the preseut polo star from the earth, it may be mentioned that its light requires about 41. C years to reach the earth, notwith stading the fact that light dashes along with such inconceivable speod that it will oover 185,004 miles per secoud. The light from Vega, the next pole star, requires eighteen years to tra verse the distance between it and the earth. As a consequence, we do uot see the present pole star as it is at the preseut time, bnt as it was 44.6 years ago. Indeed, if the pole star were blotted out from existence to-day, it would still continue to shine out as vividly as ever for 44.G years. So it is with all other Ptars, aeoordiug to their distances. Home Circa Statistics. When Barnura'e "Greatest Show on Earth" traveled throughout the United States on its annual tour, visiting every city of 40,000 inhabitants or more, it covered an area of nearly 3, 000,000 square miles, and even then appealed to a population of less than 00,000,000. Tody Hamilton once told me thnt over 1)0,000,000 tickets had been sold for this show. Of Barnaul's autobiography and his "Humbugs of the World" and "Lion Jack" it is said a million copies have been sold. Though not a humbug, Barnum was the Prince of Humbuggers. He began his career as tihowman by exhibiting Wasniugtou a nurse, Joyce iietb, set ting her age down at 1C1 years. Who else would have had the nerve to do that? He made. .$1500 a week out of this piece of humbuggery. Wheu Toyco died a post mortem proved that Burnum had added eighty years to her age. Victor Smith, in New York Press. Srrinfur Verses. Job xi. 1,1, 14 Isaiah t. irV8; Ps. xix. 7; John vi. 441 Ps. li. if-l.l; Matt. iii. 1. 2: iv. 17; Acti ii. 38; Jas. iv. 8-10; Ps. Ixxx. 7. l-efsnn Thoughts. As soon as we lose our trust and con fidence in God, and feci independent ol his care and protection, wc become prodigals in a far country and will soon he in sad want. Our worthiness to be God's children depends upon our willingness to be hij servants. What an encouraging truth is this, that we nerd not plead with God for for giveness, for he is even more willing to forgive than sinners are to be forgiven; he waits and watches eagerly for their return and receives them to himself at the first expression of true repentance. Selections. Repentance without amendment has been compared lo continual pumping iu a ship without stopping the leaks. When a Russian soldier, heavily in debt, wrote out a list of his many obli gations and exhibited it in a public place, adding in large letters the ques tion, "Who will pay these debts?" tho Car happened to see the whimsical no tire, and quietly wrote bis name after the question: "Nicholas." The soldier knew that he was free from bis credi tors. As simple as this, absolutely as simple, is the soul's way to iM rid of its sins. There is one heart that is filled with generous kindness toward every man who wants to rcnent. The voice of God is calling you. The sound of your Fath er's voice is in your heart. . . . Trust God. . . . Remember that he is ou your side. . . . arid does not desire that any man should die, but rather that all should turn and live. Many persons who appear to repent arc like sailors who throw their goods overboard in .1 storm, and wish (or the m again in a calm. C. E. Gospel Hymns. 66, 198, 340, 214. I.10, 65. Gospel Hymns, 1-4 237, 3, 94, 33S. 424. 21 1- RELATED TO TAM O'SHANTEB Oreat-Uraaddaochtar of Rolwrt llurni atlll LlTlug-. Relatives of great men still crop up out ot the silence of neglect, A gpeat granddaughter of the Immortal Scotch bard, Robert Burns, is a resident ol Nevada City. She la Mrs. Susan El eanor Andrews, the wife ot Samuel Andrews, an old Callfornlan, halllrf from Londonderry, Ireland. Mrs. An drews Is the daughter of Robert Burns, one of the two sons of the poet. Robert Burns, the younger, bad five children, four daughters and a son, named re spectively In the order of their senior ity, Mary, Susan, Elizabeth or Betty, Prudence and John. Betty married a Scotchman named Lamon and emi grated with hlra to America In 183S. Mrs. Andrews Is one of the issuea of that marriage. She was born at Nesquehontng, Pa.. In 1844. John Burns remnlned with his father until the time of his death. In 1840, and after the death of his wife, In 1870, he like wise crossed the Atlantic to Join his sister. He died four years ago, leav ing four daughters, two in America and two in Ireland. Mrs. Lamon died" in 1883, and four children survive her. "All that remain of the Burns family," writes Mrs. Andrews, "are my two brothers, one sister and myself, and four of Uncle John s children." Mrs. Andrews takes great pride In her rela tionship to Bobble Burns, from whom she has Inherited a talent for verse vriting. MARKETS. rM.TiMnna, I'olson In I'otaloep. The Sanitary Home is authority for the statement that potatoes contain a poison kuown as solauin. New pots toes contain comparatively littlo of this poison unless they grow above the surface of the ground aud have a green skin, when they are generally knowu to be poisonous. It is not, however, generally known that old potatoes contain much more of this poisonous principle solanin auu many cases of serious poisoning have occurred in late summer wheu old potatoes are nsed. In 1892 and 1893 theie was almost wholesale poi soning among the troops of the Ger man army. The symptoms were frontal headache, colic, diarrhoea, vomiting, weakness and alight stupor, and in some cases dilatation of the pupils of the eyes. Meyer investigated the case, and found in old potatoes, kept iu a damp place aud beginning to sprout, tweuty-fonr times as muoh solanin as in new potatoes. An Ancient Huuii, A great curiosity is a honse 1,100 years of age, and yet fit for habitation. This old dwelling, the oldest inhabit ed house in England, was built in the time of King Offa of Meroia. It ia nutagoual iu shape, the walls of its lower story being of great thickness. The upper part is of oak. At one time the house was fortified and kuown by tha name of St. German's gate. It stands close to the River Ver and ouly a few yards from St. Alban'a Abbey. ClirWtanlnc Olft. Christening gifts are of ancient origin. Formerly sponsors presented gilt spoons to the ohild, whioh were called "apostle spoons," beoause the figures of the apostks were carved ou the handles, A rich godparent gave the complete aet of twelve, while a less opulent one contented himself with four, and a poorer sponsor con sidered single spoon a suitable offering. nsAiw ari FI.O0I! JVIto. itwtrat H(nh Grade Extra WHEAT No. Sited t.'OUNNo. i White tints Boutheru Pmin... HYE No. 2 II AY ('linl.-i. Tlinnthy. Ooml to Prime '. M'ftAW live in nir Ids. Whost Illocks Ont Blocks TOMATOES No. a 1'EAS Standard Heconds COHN-Dry pack Moist t'lTV&TEEllS. Lily (..... 73 Sfl 9 54 ! HO 14 50 M f.fl flfid 1100 C1NNED noons, stnd.No. at Enr. 49 1 10 live 101 POTATOKH-O.NJOXS lurl'iinkn. . t riioviKioxs, HOO rnf)DrCT8-lila.t '"lenr rllwlilua Ilnins Mew Pork, tier liar...., LAUD Crude Uet rallued BUTTE It Fine Crmr. Under Fine . ., Creamery liolui Burns, 10J 21 27 it) or mns. CHF.FRF-N. V. Kannv... n. y. nam ;., tkiiu CheH anas. rOOR SUte I North Carolina I.IVB VOtTLTRl CHICKENS Ducks, ur lh Toiuono. TOBACCO Md. Iufer's.. Hound common Middling fancy UTS STOOK. PEEF Best Beeves BlllClil Uok 13 4 1H 17 H 4 on 71 87 55 15 &9 13 0) 14 01) 7 t0 9 60 79 6 141 NO WO 70 12 40 3H 7 10 60 4 7 . 3D !M IS 14 IX 19 ia 8 .' 169 8 M) DO) 10JJ 4 30 8 60 4 40 IDaS AND SKIMa, MUBKBAT.... ilauuoon , Bed Fox (Skunk Illiu-k... Opoiwuui Mink Ottur 10 40 itJ in 460 1(h) JiO) 470 400 4 60 II 43 M SO S3 M too FLOUB Southern 0 86 t'M WHEAT No. Kited 7)1 74 RYb Western w HO CI COltN No. 1 89 4D OAT No. m 1M 31) BUTTKit -Htate !l SS KG UH mute 38 34 CUihhK atata IV. i li raiLiDiLFsri. FLOUR Southern , . , WHEAT No. Ked.. COKN No. OATH No. 1 BUTTKit 8lat tOOB 1'auna ft (85 4 30 6v 71 37 7j; 81 Si 3M 80 3t 8J