-7 ' IS CI il l( ' tc tl ti Ki 11! T VI hi! VC fi THE MIDDLOUliOII POST. T. H. IIAllTER, Km roB Ann I'ko'r. M:rni.f:nri:, p.t., .m.v. a, imm. It is believed in In li.i, China, nml Indo C'liinu that a cobra that iseipes mi attack from a man iill cvciitu illy rcv ngo itself tijKin its n-;iil;in, whatever lie may do o luT' vcr In- nmy go. A Spanish steamer brought to V-v York recently eighteen Portuguese who urn; mi their way to t 'u'.iforni.i, where they int nil In in ik' w in" after r-paiii.-h methods. They were will sun plied with money. 'I'll'' cvpei inn nt of amalgamating the Indians with the surrounding p jui j.-i i n in Canada and inducing tlcm to adopt it settled life has hecti most successful in Ontalio, nnd in nil rases the tribes show nn im reuse ii tiuiiili' Tli -rc arc I'.'l, fiv.) Indians in tic I minion. A vi II - know ii I.mii l hi journalist, red. iing the fact ill .1 tin ordinary professions iu llngland arc grc.i'.y on rerowded. is liming his chlc-l -mi i m -it I to lie a cook. The 1 ' i y h is In en trained by n fa mous i lief of the Grand Hotel, I' irU, and later -rivcii for three jem to M. I'lir.r pect ii r, c'nef of the Savoy Hotel, Lon don. '11." 1 1 1 1 i : 1 1 1 ..team -hip City if I'ati-, which sailed fr i:i .Mcv York for l.iwr ji.miI ire. nl 1 , i arried more than il'HI pas engi r.-, i m I 1 1 1 i i t!n.-i! in the steerage. Th" :i .'cut 4 of the i--i l s.u',1 thai thU was the lai.;i -t number of pa-et,:;ers to h ave New York on any one vessel. A gnat many of the p.:se:i.;er.s were pcr-hon- who wi n', to Ihiglaiid to sp Mel the hoi;, l., . Tie Atli'.ta i"iii.v''.'.',.ui thinks Pri vate ( i ict '.ry II alfor I a very sensible re former. At a iiic'tiii'i r, ci ntly held in the Washington Mount Vi nnm Place Methodist church, Mr. Hnl.'or.l iisk''d niil for the street vwiifs. 1 ! said I hat he iiil been a newsboy hiius"lf, ami wanted to d sonn thing to in lp ami elevate the bojs. J led id not believe in the theory that !o'l pennitte I pun r.y ami eiliii" as a airt of grind-tone for men, ami so long ns t!ie pooler rlas-cs remained with us he. thought it, was imr iluty lo ail theni. riorlil.i will noon In: the greatest lemon growing country in the world. Lemons weighing a pound each aiv common in I'lornla, ami along the hanks of Culoo sahntchie Hirer there is a single tree in Li h hear.s .'i(i')i) lemons, Many of which weigh a poiiml each. I!i,l , except for how, Mirh larixi1 lemons arc of little Value, a-, the y are 1 1 ar-e-Lriaiacil ami pulpy. The In -t leiiceis arc l.io n mi pM' .soil ; :m l for tha' reason they are u very pr.,!it i'li crop. Tiiis conii'ry i i -in u - in.ii-e lemons every year thaa all i'thr coin.t rii comliiiieil, n:i,l tin' -i in-.ii,, i it ii u i-. c in-tan! lv incrc'isin,'. I WHEN THE SON OOE3 DOWN. Though tha morning may iMxIranrf, Anil tha itay t long anil weary, Thnti(h the rlomU ma j drkl7 lower Anil the torn pout flercoly frown shall quit forjtPt the iihailow That have lliijfnrwl in tha mnt'lowt If there tie a roIiIimi hour When the nun gmn down. What though fnlnimr ho oppo1 What tlmuKh thorns nhtitout the roww, Ami the crow Imlxirno in aorrow That we carry to tho crown. Hr ami hy we'll iviwo to wamlur An, I we'll ret forever yonJer I f t here ilnwu a hrixli t to-morrow When life' sun hihs ilown. POLLf'S GHOST. Ink. The chair wm sitting i befora the tablo at if aome one had Jut bean writ Inst, ami upon tho hearth wcrd frcah em. bcrn. I "Mrphoat h ccrloinlr A aenoiblo crea turehumanly in," wtfil Polly, an alio aeateil hnrelf in tho rhnir ami beepm to iook nverino Jwpers on llictaWe. Thcro were many note ami acrups, mcaninijh'M nml dinjoinieil, but finally nhn ranic to a jncket containing rpiito n lengthy tnanuscript, rhinely written, much fohlnl nml rltijrcrod. "The fhost nn nuthor," Polly, "ami hia manuscript hni been rcjenteii. 'Proveil unavailable to fur foliunni.' Poor fellow I AVell, I hull real hi atory if it be one. The plot thieken. Think of being nble to reail a ghont'a atory! One that the eye of mortal hm never bcheM !"' She bei;iin to read, turning tha leaven ovrr Mowly nt lirst, but irivlually lirr eyes (lew over the chmely-written page, tlui worils nml thought were filling her with nn interest tlmt ithe hml seldom felt in printed page. The mystery of it all, the M muteness of her position impreaiil tiiinnselve upon her, wrapped themselve about the utorv alio wan reading nml in- I tensitied her intercut in it. I The rain beat upon the roof that was iust above, the light shown but dimly i tho one small window that ; . . I ccniotsAcui Pretty Polly P.is, hill nat btilt upright, her riil luowti i urN falling in rich con fusion about her bare white throat, her brown eye n wide a if hu hud not been in lied mid asleep for hours. The lamp wn turned liw, a she had left it, and hIioiii: with :i dim, noft radiance over all the richly furnished room. Polly stared about her. The (hairs, the table-, the little tiuaintlv cal ved stand by the window, and which held her j l.reetiiitj i.tl.rflt.. I... !.. ..II ... i slw. 1, i.l 1. I, , Wl,..' I.i .1... . ""'""g'.l tho have I.,, ,,.' Smhienlv her eves f-ll ,,o "'n",i . "'""! " lm """J of. '"""I"- the little k ouare door iu alwive lt,e I.....1. 'ti- I ,i I . I I Ii ll i" Nl-'" H'llel. ". I L'ini-t at last, s.inl 1'ollv, einsi). 1 , , , in r l r .,-etiv tun i , i. J... ,f ""'' ' 'i" v.i niiaTi had not been - t 'i;, ill' I, .-lie NMOo .l a moment in lirealhless silem t ii "" ""i 'iioii 11 loni; nrrny 01 imineiops. I at reading. She finished ut last with but, hearing no repetition of the noise whi. 'n ha I awnki lied her, sic sprang out uch a stick, ' she said; "if alio had not said such Mi;T, silly thiiu;., one could feel that the Moty wa jier'ert." of bed. Mil on herstloners ..,,,1 .l,-,..i,. " "x '' " 'IP triOUgllt. goun. tf,re,v some bit'sof woo 1 upon tlw 1 1 W1" 'i" ' ' ""V r siia.iowingcmberv.aiidlurningouttl.el I ' "i '; -vcnb. I .I...1I lamp .-hes,.. don for-the lire to await i,r-V' , m" , K "P. the..,,,-,, whose coming she h,, been 1 I''"1-'''1 ''i'' l',''i and chair just a ahe ii.i'i MMiiei i i,, ,11, ;ill'l I I I'pi IIOWI1 iiirougii rxpcctiiig for lo! these many days. Tie- I'aseh.ills, father, mother and d iu.;i,t,'r, had moved into their present abode to av.ait tlui erection of their own house, -ind upon the very first, day of their coining Polly had pu d the little secret door," lis slid called it, ;;nd sv. Iccled t his for her room. ".lu-t think of the pos-ibilit ie for the little door into her own room. The next day Mis Paschall Hiirprised th" fa-hionalile -tationeron the corner by or b ring a whoh ream of "foolscap,,'' ltieliar.l l'ioiint opened the door of his bare little "st.nly," put down the urin ;l lul of wood ho was eurrving. and knelt loi.i leec, : she sanl to ner father, and he , 'town up m the hearth to kindle a fire. took It, and for n moment neither 'poke. "I fear I cannot open thia little 'trap' door for you from this aide," ho nahl nt laat. "There la a long hnll which lendi" over your houo to the ono gr.indinchet nnd 1 occupy now. Come, I will tnk you out that way. I come nil the way over here o that my light may not dis turb grandmother nt night. If vourown apartment are near this I fcir I have dis turbed you," he added, a ho held tho door open and she passed out into tho narrow hallway. "(), no," alio nnswered; "I think I have only heard you once, nml then I was so in hopes you were a ghost." 'So you were caught by that little spring lock." said old Mrs. Ulount, when they iiad found her and Polly'g presence wn. explained. "I remember being fastened in tho lit tle sipmte room once," said tho old lady Very gently. "It was when I was a young girl nml here on a visit to your Aunt Ellen Hichards. Your grandfather induced me to climb through the littlo bor, nml then ho fastened it behind me. Ila called to me that he would not let mo out until I had nrotniscd to innrrv him. I stayed in nil night nml half tho next day before I would promise, though. Hut come, Kichard, we will take Miss IWhall through the little aide door of the library and she will be nt homo in a liniment," suit theild lady. "There wa n time when I wn in hopes you were a ghost, too," Kichard said to Polly, n he held tho door open for her to pas through. "Why!" naked the girl. "So that I might hope for further as sistance in writing my stories," he nn sttered, with a snifle. Xot many month hud passed, how ever, before he was telling her that ho could not writ without her that he could not live without her. "Well, I suppose I must make the sue rifico nml marry yon, Kichard, dear," Polly answered, "if for nothing but to preserve you from manufacturing such heroine. a your first ln-foro I redeemed her. "' Uwklh it Tinun. POPULAR SCIENCE. iid. safe from lnort i! but pilosis stand had gotten upon the lioii.seee;iner .s step. ladder and found tin; door fastened lend nml fa-'. "It is all -.ile," he "i, I want il to Ik hatni-," Pollv -.,1,1; Hot I, e k for holts and bars. " "If it is a ghost you want," said her father, "you may get it. 'J'iiis lcci-e l,e l uis to one (,f th" oldest, and at one time til" wealthiest, families in t lie State. It has stood here for yens, nml has known in my t h ujoes, and, 1 piesiime, could tell niMiy stories and perhaps give up a :;,,ol many ghosts. 1 rented it from a -wcet-laced, grand looking old lady, woo live somehow mid somewhere in thus,, dark up irtinents next door lo us. I think she is the only surviving member of the nohle family whose glory and wealth have departed. .No. I beiieve she told I;,,, that there w as a liov. her graiiosoii. v Hie w hat he Ile was wli it n casual observer would hnvc called an ugly limn, but ho had a good, well-knit tigure, a lino head and strong though irregular features. There was a tired, troubled look on his face a he sat down at hi writing table and I, -tit his i.eid upon his folded hand, lie was weary in mind and body. His days had always been ilays of toil, hi life liad liecn one long struggle. AVith the heritage of n good iiuiiih that had come to him from hi. forefathers, thero had cini" from his father a legacy of debt which he had been striving for years to pay. "My task is almost done," he said to himself. "If I could only get my story accepted! If I only knew how to mako it go! I feel sure there are good thing in it, but if I only knew what to make the girl say. When il fellow's acquaint ance, with women doesn't extend beyond io i working nt she told I a knowledge of his own grandmother he s, but I don't remember." can't have a very clear idea of what n IIoa interesting!" exclaimed Pollv. ! young girl conversation would bo like. A great outcry his 1 n raised in thi .Swiss Canton Tcs-i;i against the preval ence there of bribery at elci lions. The political workers arc coiistMiitly racking thi ir brains to devise new ineain of buy ing votes. The Mayor of a small city near Locarno recently, while running for re-ch rtioii.iitvitcd every man who would promise to vote for him to cat and drink at his expcii 'i' for three mouth at certain specified taverns. The success of his plan is .sho.vn by the fact that, he was re elected and that bis bills at the t iverns in ipicstioii iiiiiouiitcd to J.-'mH). Votes bought in the old-fashioneil way cos; from twenty cents to Ti each, liven the ilergy nre said to bribe electors right and left. (Juelion are often nsked about the relative slrene,!'.! of the various religious bodes. Here is a table of statistic , gathered by th.' I.th rt mlt it' from the ile. iioiniii.it ioaal Year books and otlcr mi- ! tli,,i It.itive .sources: Cit M r 1.',,, .l'','.,, I.Vinlf A,!venti-N l.'il i s.i !oo.nI , l":n.;ists IC.C.'l e'.'.lit; l.llT-..'iS;l t ill'isli.,11 I'llioll. l.."i,HI ,"iOO r.'ii.ikio I ', n.ii', ,4'iti, null .t. ),.V,:i 4,'.'s:l ('.'.is I'm ml- i.oit I'H'i.'.no . ti'iin'n l! aiii lieal !','." ,"sii I'.'.'i.om I.lltlli V.'.lll- I l.l.'ll i'ssli-sS Men,,,. h.ts .M'.i'.su :.".i.t;o t.;:i.s-i Mi nn, Hi, i. s -IM JiH.mM . .Moravians !s 1 1 1 It, .'l.l j ri-.-lyterians. . ... lo,:ill !.;; 1, 1,1.11:1 llpiseopaliau- ,'i. I'd t.inj t-Y'.i'.W j r.ef,,r,ne.i 'j,o.-.s :v: Human ('utiioiie. 7,1-t 7,'.K',ii 7,s,.Vi,'.",i4 I niM r-ali-ts. . . . i'.'I I'.sl IN.Tvl . New .lenisale.ii... 100 . li.Ooil ', I'liitai'iann e-l 4!1 iVI.T'U j Total i .'. TiiT ii-4,:cj :.'o,'n;r,:i:o The increase, as shown by these figures, is ST'i, SI 05. The notcworty gain were us follows: Ikiptists, 1(M','J0; t'ongre ..atioimlists, IS.Oai; Methodists, 'J l.Ii.VJ ; Prc-byteriiins, 4U, i'JS ; Kpi.scopnlians, l'.',.","; Komati Cutholii: population, ( 1 5 5, ',".11. Tl'.e Society of friends is thu only one reporting a decrei'su in liiciu bership, but iu keverul o'lu-w the.'c u little change. "I inn sure I shall liml a ghost." Ihii so many uneven! lul months imd J'll-se.l since s Use, need her.-ef in the l ii that she had almost birgotlen to expect a ghost until to night, when a iioi-e i.s of slippeied ieet. walking ovil a hard, bare lloor h id awakeiii'd her. Sin- - ll torn longtime, he- eyes fixed Upoll the little lio ,r, expecting every liioceio l!i,; a gho-tly Icin.l would undo tic hi e'e n lock, and a gho-t'v folia would emerge lioin t iie .in! km s lieyonil. l!u! - her maid found her : till sitting nml fa-t ii-lci p the next Inoiciug when she came t, , an nk' n hci . "My pretty 1'oliy will have a glooinev .lay of it, 1 tear,'' said her lather when lie his-, , her good bye. "It Is i.iinin ; in torn i,;-; " "i, that is deliohtiiil," said Polly: -I shall have a good, ipiiet, lay, dreamy day of it, just such it day as one should have after an episode with a ghost." " Yours was a very tame cpi.sode," said her mother. "I should want something feaily exciting." 'Xivci' you fear.'' said I'oily ; "last night's ia pcricnec was only l!:e beginning j.l-t the prelude, ns il were; the excite. Ilic ,t is yd to come." Though the ruin palle.-eil .soothingly up, hi the windows, and the warmth nnd glow within were o,i,lueive to day dreaming, Polly soon found the bonis id idleness growing long and tedious. "I shall try for Hie hundlith time," she said at last, "to see if I can open the lit t ! - door, w hich 1 urn sure leads to my gh..-:;" I'oily was light and giir eful and agile, so to scramble from Cue back of the big ( hair to the top of (he book-,' was but the work of a moment. The little dour which was sunken i i the wall above was of black o.tk, richly toy. red. 1'oliy searched il closely to see if she could lind any possible way to open it. Sud, h nly, almost bv chance, Jut ! Well. I'll try oii"e more and sec what I ; cut do with it." ! He picked up the MS., which was folded carefully nnd still in tho place wh'-re he had left it. slowly he turned over tho first few , page, listlessly leading them. Suddenly he held the paper up close to '.he l imp. The handwriting had changi.il ! There was no break in the story, but ns I." lead on he found whole pages which I.e 1 h i I not rit:en, and gradually it dawned no "ii him tii.it theii m Mil ion were giving his story a life, a sparkle that it hud not had bi lo'.e. Who can have done itJ" he said, when he had finished. "No one know oi this den but myself not even graml iiiotlu r." Perhaps it i n ghost come back from out our pa-t grandeur," ho said with a .-mile, "nnd a very witty ghost alio is, too," looking at tne beautiful womanly I writing that wa mingled with hi own, and I feel deeply indebted to her for her interference." I "Well, I shall send the story off again, and, if it is published, that will make ' my assistant show up if she bo not a ghost iu very truth." Jie said, Iry-nud-by. A Shoeless Crowd. Seven ladies and eleven gent?emcn were landed from a Pullman palace car iu Cincinnati a. few morninu since with out shoe to their feet, ami this is how it happened On the Pennsylvania west Imund express out of Pittsburg in tho evening there wn an unusually heavy travel from New York, and at Pittsburg it was necessary to attach mi extra sleeper. Tho porter selected for the run was an eastern route man, and he discov ered soon after tho train left the depot that an old friend of his wa running on one of the regular cars ahead. The por ter nut, exchanged salutation and agreed, after gelling all their people to bed, that it would be a good nchcine to polish the passengers' shoe together in the forward tar nnd spend the balance of the night in a social chat with intervals devoted to libation from a pocket Mask. The porter of tho extra gathered his people's shoes together in n pillow case three Parisian petite pair owned by young ladies of Cincinnati cu route homo from Europe, four pair of matronly gait ers and eleven heavier pair of various style nnd sizes, belonging to the men in the car. lb; took them forward to hi chum's car, each shoe carefully chalked with the number of the berth, nnd the two guardian of the slumbering passen gers had a genial time together, so pleas ant, in fact, that it wa nearly daybreak when it occurred to the porter of the ex tra that it would be well to lake up iiis people's shoe ami get back to hi own tar. He went back, but hi car bail van ished! To say that he turned white w ith astonishment would l! no exaggeration. The Cincinnati cur had been sw itched at Columbus, mid the Cincinnati passen gers shoes were spinning along ut fifty mile an hour toward Indianapolis, on the St. fjouis section of the Yandaliti ex press. The M,rter felt the gravity of tho situation, so Inr as he wn i-oneerned, nnd at the next stopping station he dis appeared rapidly toward thu casb with it pillowcase full of shoes over his shoulder. The passenger did not discover ther loss until the breakfast hour, and the comical surprise can better bo imagined than de scribed. They leeched their homes in carriage with slightly soiled hoisery. I'h iltulclph ia Jiirtu'tl. "I have brought you the magazine containing tin1 new story that is creating such a furor now," said Polly's father to her one day. "Nobody knows the author, but I am told he ha made the hit of the season," said Mr. Pa-a hnll. "t)h." said Polly, significantly, when she had cut the leaves. That was all. She we:,: up to her room, taking the magai.iiie. "I believe I shall pav another visit to Inv ehost s aoai'tmetit . ' she w:iul wlii.n 1 she had finished rending the story. So saying she scrambled up on the bo.ik-cnse, opened the door and went into the room be' ond. Her dress caught on the door as she Missed through and linger touched a little spot iu the eve of I nulled ir lo wiih n click. l'.ef.'.i',. !,.. one ot the i u ved griliins, a spring clicked ; h. time to try to extricato herself she heard a key hist rted into the lock on the oilier side of the room, tho .loor opened mid a man walked iu. Polly leaned back against the wall startled, fright em d. The young man stood holding the door in his hand and a startled ex- the door Hew open iu her face. Polly gave a scream and sank down Upon the top of the book case. She waited a moment; no sigh, no sound re. fii! ted from her sueccsslul cll'ort nnd she stood up nnd peero I through the doorway. (irailiinlly, a her eye become necu. i pivssion in hi big gray eyes, tomed to the seini-diu kin's., she began to ! '-How how ilid y,',u get here?" he distinguish the object in the little room asked u'ruptlv, beyond. Tnere was a little case of books, ; "Through he little door here," said a large sipiare table ami ono chair, big Polly, breathlessly. "It ha shut to be and cosy and comfortable looking. j hind' me. Oh, dear, I thought you were Polly's father had always called her a 1 a ghost." , "plucky" girl, and now shj hesitated j ..-, I think it is you who nro tho only a moment, then stepped up through .-host," said tho young man, with a smile. the opening into the room beyond. It was a very small room she found when she had gotten in, and tho only door that led from it wa locked. The books on the shelves were old and rusty looking. "They lolong to a dead generation," said 1'oliy. Polly turned her beautiful eyes a mo-r mi .lie liiiue were papers, meet alter , m uitup tolas good, ugly faeo and held I'.ieet of tnanuscript, pencils, pens and out her hand to him. Ho blushed M ho "Won't you open tho door for me?" snid Polly, recovering herself. Tho young man camo up to her. "You are .Miss Paschali," ho said. "I have heard my grandmother f peak of you. Mv name is Itiehard lilount." How Tcnplu Halls nro Made. All the world is now cither rolling or talking about tenpins. The balls arc made of lignum vita1, which grows in South America. Tho tree grow to be fifteen inches in diameter, but tho out side of the wood i not hard enough to make a good ball, and only the heart of the tree is used. The largest ball usually made are eight inches iu diameter, whilu the smallest one are four inches. Twelve balls constitute a set for one alley, and they are worth from 11.5(1 to i:1.5() each. They urn turned in a lathe by a tool which liio"es in a tiuo circle, nml will luako u ball from an inch to a foot in size. The block of wood is net in a chuck, and ouu end is turned into a hemisphere. It is the.t changed around, and the other end presented to the tool nnd the ball is nearly finished, needing only to be fin ished with sand paper and polished, all the work being done in the lathe. The balls get out "out of true" from use, and they have to be turned occasionally. The pins are usually made of maple, nnd are turned in a lathe. lincln tter J'utt-Ksjirt Electrical Frauds. Those electrical machines ut which you test your strength on the oidewalk nro frauds. Tho moving of the hand on the dial ha no coniicctiiiu ut all with the measurement of the amount of electricity which is sent into tho system of tho pa trons by tho withdrawal of the core from tho soil. Tho hand on tho dial is moved by a spring in.Mdo tho core which tho fakir works as ho draws out the core, so that all bets paid on tho relative amount of electricity people can stand front these machine are off. This is a piece of news contributed confidentially by an electrical expert. Ut. .Louu Star The average human life In Home, under Ca?sar, wan eighteen year ; now it ia forty. A Russian mineralogist, K. D. Chrust srholT, claims to have li.scovereil a new metal, which he proposes to naino "Kus ium." The largest Incandescent circuit In the world is forty-five mih's in length. Th company working it is situated nt Ot tawa, Canada. No fewer than 1810 patients bitten by dogs were treated at tho Pasteur insti tute in tho year ending October 31. There were thirteen deaths. According to the eminent physiologist, M. Happey, tho stomach contains 5.000, 000 glands by which tho gastric juico is secreted, nnd a few others which secrete only mucus. To the perfumes of flowers M. ln gerer ascribes tho power of protecting ngainst, nnd even arresting, consump tion. In the perfume distilling town of La fira-sso lung troubles are but littlo known. Tho elephant skeleton set nn in tho ' front ball of the Madras (India) museum is ten feet six inr ilea high, and it has been stated that this i the skeleton ol the largest elephant ever killed iu that country. Oil for locomotives in place of coal will, it is stated, be largely introduced on one of the English railway soon. It i probable also that, petroleum refue will be used for fuel in consequence of the high price of coal. A complete list of tho flora of New foundland and Labrador, in preparation by Kev. A. C Waghornc, will contain about nine hundred specie of flowering plants, fifty ferns and over two hundred und fifty mosses and lichens. Surgeon are finding constantly increas ing opportuniti'-s for making use of elee- j tricity in the servico of th"ir profession. It 1 sanl to be ad numbly adapted for tho treatment of neuralgic pain, nnd its ap plication in chronic, cases is very beueib cial. Among those who have worked out tho problem of procuring alluminiuiii by dcc trolysis M. Minet is one of the most suc cessful. The electrolyte used by him is a mixture of from thirty to forty jn-r cent, of cryolite with from sixty to seventy per cent, of common suit. Dr. Bunion Sanderson foresees another divb'ii.n in science. He observes, iu a biological paicr in the Kritish Associa tion, that morphology and physiology have now ili verged so widely, as regards sub ject ami method, that there seems to be danger of a complete separation of one from the other. A new stylo of horseshoe has been patented by two Wisconsin men. The shoe is made in sections, with clastic cushions between nnd rivets connecting the sections, making a shoe in which there will be a vertical yieldiugof Fpring, avoiding shocks or jar to the horse whilu traveling over hard pavements or roads. A new moihi of teaching music hia been proposed in France, based on the periodicity of the octave. A radical re form is aimed ut, the system being ex pounded in a scries of fundamental prop ositions such us musical effect is ipiitc different from acoustic effect; there can be no physical gamut, a major and minor, but only one, that of the white note of the piano called the major an 1 so on. After the lamentable experience of thi country, it is interesting to know that there i a part of the world where the buffalo is not only not dying out, but in creasing in numbers. Vast herds of these animals tire now running wild over cer tain district. of northern Australia. The ii ii i ri in I m are said to be massive and well grown, with splendid horns. The first buffaloes were landed at Port Kssington, tueensUnd, about the venr IS".",). Counterfeiters. Counterfeiters, unlike most other classen of "crooks," are drawn from all ranks of society. Many person of worthy antecedent drift into crime almost by accident. A line engraver, for instance, iu a moment of thoughtlessness, tries his hand at an imitation of a Government note us a mere test of skill. Success in deceiving his friends, perhaps by way of jest, gives him a dangerous impulse on ward, and in an hour of weakness the temptation to uso his powers for bad, und find him a ready victim. The same insy bo true of n die-cutter or metal worker who makes a matrix for a coin even for the adornment of a bit tif jewelry or a un advertising device. The policy of tho Secret Service has been uniformly to discourage everything of tho sort. The statutes of the. I'nited States on the subject nre very i weeping, and their interpretation by the :ourts correspondingly broad. Where there i.s plainly no fraudulent intent a person dis 'overi'd making anything which could possibly be mistaken for a (iovcrnmeul coin, or note, or bond, or slump, or, in deed, for any part of one, is (piietly warned from headquarters to cease. If thu work is finished it is ordered de stroyed, and on non-compliance declared contraband, and confiscated. This often seems like a serious hardship to innocent makers of fancy goods, but the majority of them yield gracefully enough when the principle underlying the rule is ex plained to them. J'ithtitirij J)mj'ih-li. Darnnin Opposed to Pahy Shows. illinium has been successful in every thing ho undertook, except baby shows. Ho ingeniously :oufeh.se that "baby shows" were the hast satisfactory. Wheu he announced that n committee of ladles had decided upon tho baby of so-and-so, ho was invariably received with a storm of indignation from uinety-niuo disap pointed mothers, who (making common cause) pronounced tho successful littlo one tho meanest, ugliest baby of tho lot, and ho and tho committee got roundly abused for their stupidity and partiality. Itanium could stand a great deal, but not tho tears and reproaches of ninety-nine disnpoiuted mothers aud ao ho will no liavo a baby show In Loudou.- London Court Juurnal. John Kink, of JennerTon,vt una a colt, which when ;. " v" l H weighed 814 pounds. D10n,1' Lockjaw resulted from the ! reived by a hoy at Pittsl '1 truck In tho bark with sr. .. , 1,0 Tho camel is used sneeessf n . ' I perior to tho mulo for !k,'?n,.i,,'rlsl The Government at preH'tit i. . frlgold piece it ,LrX -m,umo,,K.twecnthirty.sVe,-- There is advertised fur ... tcrshiro. Enirlinil. . ,.i . " "'"H a lease which h... IT it J. ' l,roP"J It was made for 0(1(1(1 ... ... ... "l: I rank C rone, a wealthy m-r, K . Krie County, Ohio, has hP(,n his sisters trraiulilnn,,!,!... . rlw is sixty-flvo and the bride twty Thero has Imwt, ilixon... i. . C,d,thestu,pofn.e,p,oiaU.hK;i feet from tlm ,rr, I . " ""4 .... . ... ,, ,,e;,sr,,, fn 1 feet in diameter ami 1:c. i. .. "I fere nee. ""0 The owrator of nn electric ( ,lr p idinr rivnisiii1 ........... . i 1 uii'-iii v,rv mi,,u and the iron work l.eetn,; , ' i.mi, iu passengers ree,,)lhi , vere shocks. ' John Slinro. of n,l, i ...ie.,, lllip ,1 tn ll'kVd l.((.ll mn.n., I.... . , , : iu i.n mn,;. 4lay he Was accident ly shot j t ;; nnd badly hurt while' hunting wj;, t keys for the wedding feast. " The soil of Hrailfonl i,.,. said to impart a pe..ulir g 't ' J lM'rrirs.inakinir them l,,k ... if . ... ', . and giving the berries a beautiful v.' I tin i It is .In.. il.. .'I' . Vl " i me siuea in tli, A Pocahont.is Cm nt.- , u- v. i .i.: ...... .. v ' " in me swipe oi a woman in w , , : t ..i. .... ... - ' 'v ingil "en SIUCK Hill Of reviilv,-, lr out to be nothing but the i,.w tree as thrown against a wall hv a .;, lamp. A iifm.i. .!t.-!.. . . , , .Mirt!i:i,-ti(, w Aurun, wmo, wiii nttr-n-ti'ti tXrM ILIHUMrOl1 t I in n I. i.i t .. . " l MM-.U u urn. investigation n vt-v - j met tlmt tlio tiniiAii...iio.. unman; pnospnorcsccnt ilisjil.,v, A line drawn from the ectitn i i ... .i... . .. ne.-i in in,; eemre oi un.. Kri,Jt t(J fallen tlie ".Meyer a line. It -li,,,: the range of the feet is scarcely M,:tj, same in two individuals, and, tli,: iu rxpcci a ut irom uuiiomi u. poet the impossible. Martin hnrsou, of North 1),; 4 stumiileil ami fell while walking ar-s piece of land from which mhu,, n-j. ItusIi hail just been cut. la f. 1 I.:- .1. .1 e ,. ipeiii'u ma lllliuill Ullll It'll nn ,i ,:n I. ..... I.... I V! 1. .... . " ' Hi"" ten iin-iies IllLJll. I He j, , , q tercd his brain ami he did nli;. j htantly. John Peyton, of Maine, was :ijr:-', ns healthy a man as there wuini State. Ho was sitting in a clmir vleti friend camo up, spoke to him, ltd slapped him familiarly on the .;A,'jc. IIu died instantly. The nutnjxr'W no evidence of heart failure or icilw, anil ttie causo or Ins death is a v.,w,.x C I.. Alexander has on exhiiih.iK his store in Madison, X. I., a ur; j lect little specimen of the tiiuir :-.x. presented him by his friend. Vi'iljl j.iiuo linn, it came tortti I rutin ta - :::.-t :, I. i'tl iir .ii (0 foot artesian well twenty mil, of Howard. This well, it is with a wonderful force, ane small lish freely during the summer. A limit two venrs iil'o a nvir Irs burst the burl; of an oraieje tr e .it burn, Cal., all around i ear the & si and it subsequently fel' i.;T. In,i.:.i space of from eight to tivi h ii'ii, the tree without any bark. Stu upper part of the tree lived nnd : i " i . ... , r.. nun i unity lo-nay. Hearing inn:, fact of a tree living niter being pletely girdled is proluh'y u::;t dented. V1ij 1IKM) Is Not h Le.il Tor. Tho following explanatior. uill l" you why the year 1100 will not hn u:j1 among leap years : The year i o hours ami 4'J minutes long: elivicu utes are taken every year to iiulr year .'IJ5J days long, mid every fo Vear we have un extra day. flu' Julius ('ivsar's nrraiiL'eineiit. Y"1: ask: "Where do these eleven nJ: come from?" They i-ome frcin w b ture, and are paid by omiuiiig l 4' every 100 years, lint if leap omitted rcgularlv every ion yai, u' course of 400 years it is found thi! eleven minutes taken each u .ir "ill only have been paid buck, Im! whole day will have been given up Popo Gregory XIII., who improve! t.'iesar's calendar iu 1SS2. di i ro'1'- iery centurial year ilivisihle vli...il.l l. u 1.,.,.. V.,... fi..r .,11 ye borrow eleven minutes each i-.ir, than paving our borrowings In (.lilittilnr tl.r.xi I, ,... w ill ll.rt ; ,s - r j - tlll'iiil veurs. ikli.l 1.. to lire lil.-lt t cl'S i'V ' - 'I - , ing a lea) year iu the fuiirtn ('" year. Pope Gregory's arrattU't-'' so exact and the borrowing I"-' back baliiuced so nicely, that v.i' more than we pav back to the ii''"1 ' onlv one duv in MSdlS veins. Sf, "v - j . JUl'iiblic. A lleinarkahlo M ar Ilisb'i'J- It cost Thomas S. Townsiinl eight years of labor und iS'''''A" 111. ,1.1, If ti ..o. .tl.il., fl.,,1,1 lli.LVSll .......l l, LUlllj.llU (('(.( ..t,-', ( lllrioil Ii'mIs. itml from lllltUllllHi und biographical records, a lii''1!.' the late Civil War. It covers the f from 1KU0 to 18US: comnriM' 100 volumes, iinii enntuins CO.'JOO Mr. Townsend paid 5000 sold' ' 1 I...11.... fr.illl lit. vrnpupi I uuu puril'lllt-ili" 1 tii niu.l.i lit. (.It., tttn.ru The c03-r lilaces thu vnliiu of the niIUftJ-" 15,000, und among tho men '. testilied to its worth were (Jem-nil W' General lleaureganl, Willi:"" J t'.rvulil niwt tit.. I'..,,,,., .to I'liris. U fV - lfnftk'V dueed a bill for the purclui library. jtev J vrk Jvit. "S : , 1 ' . .... il J-U