1 1 ? r' i - M :!: I! t; : Southern Progress. A monthly, sixteen-page journal containing in each number some twenty narra tives of the South, chiefly ,.rrintiv and Ttrtrr5al' The paper is undoubtedly the best illustrated journal in the world, and the only publication which presents glimpses of Southern life and Southern people. It is a favorite souvenir with those who have visited the South; and it serves a good 2 purpose, in lieu of a visit, to those who have sever been there. The regular price of Southern Progress is fifty cents a year, but to introduce the paper we will send it j three months for ten cents. FRANK A. HEYWOOD, Editor sod PuBllsher, 211 S. 10th SL, Phlladtlphio. iXl fliitHiOiCatH - ....a.(lJ HAIR HEALTH Kevtr (alt t Re new Youthful Color sad Lit to Cray Hair. i;m on. UAY't n AIR HEAITH. if h Covm BALIS apota. lona Ann&ruH. hair fslllnt. clp dlaaaen. or Iiimd. Abaolulelr on t r'aln rktn a.ma. Gives Perfect Satisfaction. lt liAltl 6ROWEB DHE1MKO for Mr3 Women. Children. 11 jnr hair l( , HAI.l.lVG, KADMU or TIRMSIQ , CillAi t-v at once DIt. HAY'S HAIH , UKALTJt. Only 50 Cants Per Large Bottle. ! ITeiNirrd by LOSRO IPI'LT CO, , nn.'i llroinlnuy. K. Y who will sand It , iirrpuKt. ioK thr with a oaee of DR. , llAl'M MI L OOKX. pnlr iirt u4 . lnRiaiM i nnt on rvcaipf o! m'm-.i l tr litie. Sl-'O. flONT ACCEPT ANY SUBSTITUTE. S DEAF NESS & HEAD NOISES CURED lnitanttr. Our UTVISIBLB TUBE Cuahlona hrlp whm all aia fella, aa ar'.aaa- help ry. Bii-anmin.w, n0 pain. vn:n'r r,rl. Snd to K. Ilteeos Co, So Urondvrar. inuatratM book CDDR ad Proofa retu SPECIAL NOTICES. Kmull ii.rT!lseinentH ot every d"crlntwn, wane, S.ih- or Itrtiii. Loat or round, or ther m tlces lnTii;d u iaer tlitu uen't lur onoliulf cent a word lor ouu Insertion ami one-inurtli ccm a word emii autnequpal Insertion. NultilUg' lu- sena lor i?m in.iu U'u ceum. A Cure for rTOH llrmlitrhea. Kor clelit yours I suffered from comipailon and severe umuluclie, the headache uhukiiv lasting three dHys at a lime. Headache powders reliev ed me temporarily, but left Uio had an eftoct. Mnce 1 bean taklug Celi-ry KIuk I have tjrtjutlv Unproved In ni-altn. at'ldmn or never bave head- a iie. nave Kaintta in neon, ana H-vi aeci'imiv Kini; tor ilic Ni-rvea. Liver and Kidneys la Mil in wi:. auq pm'Kaea uy w. ii. iteniian Tmi?vllle; MUldleswarlU A I'ltUi, MotUuru; 11 A. Kbrighi, Allue. A DMIMSTRATOR'S NOTICK. Let- XX. ter of AdiniaiHtration in the en fate of Henry (irulib, Sr., late of Centre tnwh Htiln. Huvder Cj . I'a.. dee'd., havlnit b-en irrant e1 lj l lin uiKliTHlL'ned. all ni-rwiiiH kimwlnr tbemwlvea Imb'hv'd loaald eatJile are reiesleii iu inaxe iiume'iiaie nayiuefji, wniieTiioe iinvinv -anna win ireivni luc.'iu uuiy auiueniiouieu t Uie uuderhlfueu. II EN It Y U. OltfllH, Admr. Jacob uiltxTt. Att'y. E XKCLTUirS NOTICK.-Notice ie 1 hereby elven that letters ltaineDtarv ui on l lie eMute of Kllzubetli Walu-r. late ui Uenlrevllle, tvntre twp., xuyder county. Pa. deo-ased, Uave ben laoued In due form of law totlie underKlffnnl, to whom all Indebted to aald enlate cbould make lintnmiate pavniem Mid tlioM LaviutirlaJiiiH airnfnHt it abould pre aebl tlieu duly autbentlial-d fur -M lenient. I HI AH WtlKRU, tUeculor. Jaiysfi. ink. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. It te r of AduiitiiHtratiou i n t h r ut ol J5v KampheL laleof Centre township huydor etunty, raN doe'd, Vavlni lawn irranux U tba uiitlrraiKBsd, all pvrmiDi knowing tliaiu reiver lndeltil tu aald entate arc roiuetrd t make lujuiediate parment. while Uiom balni claim will preaent tbeia duly authenticated U it undent uod. JONATHAN MfSKEIt. DAMKL V. BIMUAMAN, Aujf. ss, jtw. AdmliiUtawrH. DATFMK OBTAINED' r n 1 1-II I V TEEMS EASY Consult or ouiuinuulcato wiui the Kditoi vftiila paper, wbo wUl girt all ueieded tnlor Bat kin. rfUMPHREYS Ka. 1 Cures Fever. No, 3 " Infants' Diaeaaea. No. 4 " Diarrhea. No. 8 " Neuralgia. No. 9 " Headache. No. 10 " Dyspepsia. No. 14 Cures Skin Diseases. No. IB u Rheumatism. 20 " Whooping Cough . 27 " Kidney Diseases. . SO u Urinary Diseases 77 Colds and Crip. Suld lor dnucrlrta. or aut nreimM uuon raoekit vt pruie, uc uvula ba. Uuuitirtyr' MwUviu r 1.1..' i.1 5 SCCCONER ICATICO 4 X AND ITS CRUISE. ADVICE to tb person who ii jostbe-1 grinning a residence in the South ' ess: Never be surprised at anything, 1 no matter how extravagant or nnex-1 pected or erven Un possible it may be, for it is in the South seaa that the un expected is most certain to come to pass, say an exchange. Furthermore, never believe the men on the beach who are moved to tell you of a precise ly similar happening somewhere else, for that is the beach-combing instinct of romance. Chance plain, unaided chance may be better counted onto bring about more marvelous things than were ever told in any story of the beach-combers beginning, "When Sir Arthur was governor over yonder in Fiji," of "When Shirley Baker was run ning thing down in Tonga." No where but in the South Tacine would you find an expensive excursion, pas sage 110 a head, with hundreds of excursionists from all over the world attracted by the idea of a cruise among the islands, yet not allowed to land at a single island just because they had a solitary case of measles aboard. So when a strange schooner was sighted up the coast running down the trade wind for Apia, nobody really ex pected that it would be a common place trader or even a yacht, but no body could have Invented the compli cation which it brought, not even If he had cudgeled his brains for a day and a hulf. Yet Apia felt that it had pretty well sounded the depth of schooner possibilities when it had studied the in flammatory intricacies of the San Francisco schooner yacht Tolna of Count and Countess Fcstetlct, who will be ever remembered on the beach as the titled Hysterics. The pilot duly displayed on his flag pole at Mntautu the proper signal for a schooner sighted, and started out in his whaleboat, manned by Savage Is land boys, to meet the Incomer. Apia, being interested in .coming ships, met to take a drink, and figured it out that no vessel was known to be under chur ter for the beach except one of the firm a copra barks, last heard of In Dclogoa bay. As soon as the Btrnnpe sail appeared in sight around the point spyglasses were brought to beor. As each glass was coaxed into work ing order and leveled on the newcomer. it was confessed that no one had ever seen the schooner before, and even the flag was In dispute, some saying It was Italian, and others Greek, and there was no way of settling It nearer than by going to one of the consulates and asking to look at the colored flag pic ture In the dictionary. As she came coltlng in through the pass, and an chored well in toward the shore. It was easy to read her name, Adrtatlco. This left the dispute about the flag at balanoed as ever, for if one of the geographers at the bar could prove her flag Italian, because Italy was washed by the Adriatic sea, another could employ the some argument In favor of Greece. Very soon another flag went up, the yellow flag of quarantine, and the health officer's boat was seen pulling to the landing stage. lie was met with questions about the schooner, and the disease. "She's the Adriatlco, and I dont know where she comes from or any thing about her. There are b1x peo ple aboard, and they all have a very high fever; in fact, they are fighting mad. They surrounded me as soon as I got aboard, and the only thing I could make out was: 'Cspltan del puerto!' which was the burden of their cry. So I ran up the yellow flog, be cause I have known that fighting fever to be contagious, and I guess the pe nce will be needed aboard. With the chief of police the collector of customs went off to the schooner. The six men renewed their hubbub, nnd it neemed that very nearly every tongue was current aboard the vessel except the English and German, which ure needed in Apia. A very little broken English showed the chief of poli that there had been no end of trouble aboard, and arrests were, therefore, needed. One man seemed to be skipper, and he was the man who had the shattered English. Of him the chief of police asked which of the party were the Bailors, for when there is trouble aboard ship the crew is always arrested. lie point ed ont two men, who were promptly passed over the rail and into the boat alongside. Then for the first moment they became quiet, possibly simply exhausted, possibly awed by the three fat half-castes who wore clubs and German silver stars with the inscrip tion "M. P." Next the man with frag--mentary English pointed out another angry disputant, and he, too, was paseed over the side and suppressed himself. With his prisoner the chief was just about to pull oft to the ca boose when two of the three who were left aboard jumped into the boat and Into arrest, leaving only the man who had the few words of English to transact the necessary business with the collector of customs. The yellow flag was hauled down, the ship was ad mitted to pratique, and five-sixths of her company to jail. When the collector of customs asked the survivor of the crew for the ship's paper that remarkable Individ uu did not lead the way to the cabin compan ion and produce hi paper after the regular sea fashion, with s cigar and a drop of something to keep the cold out. Instead ha made a headlong rush to the galley forward, from which he promptly emerged, waving a document in one hand and in the other band the empty buking powder tin from which Le had evidently extracted it. This document he spread out upon the main bt-h for the inspection of the collect or of custom. That official learned tost It was written in Spanish and had several seals, bat It corresponded to bo ship's papers ever seen. Finding that h could make no headway against the lock of common speech the official departed, leaving orders with the tide waiter to keep strict watch over the cargo of unknown character and value beneath the hatches, which hs had taken the usual precaution of sealing. The next morning the whole party was before the municipal magistrate, to whom the chief of police explained that it had been engaged in s riot on board the schooner Adriatlco in the harbor, thst on complaint of the cap tain he had arrested three members of the crew and that others had volun teered to go to the calaboose and had been accommodated. Be did not know the name of the prisoner nor any thing about the disturbance which could be understood. The court looked toward the five prisoner and the one who had .been in the position of captain and complainant ; the court, in fact, was distinctly in a quandary and wa plainly seeking a way out. But the people of the Adriatlco loosed upon this as permission to state their case or case, which they did at once all six simultaneously. The uproar was immediately intolerable, and it took all the effort of the police and bystander to bring the party to or der. To add to the trouble the com plaining witness got mixed with the prisoners and the chief of police could not Identify him again. In the last commotion only one man seemed to catch a glimmer of what the trouble was, a local character of Apia, Tortu gee Joe, who was n one-armed boat- i. rortugce Joe had never given evidence, of very much sense, and hia Englinh was not onlydlalectlc, but, like most dialect, generally Incompre hensible, lie saluted the court with the stump of his right arm, and an nounced that one, of the prisoners wns a very fine gentleman, and that he enme from the Atores, the western Inlands o! the kingdom of Portugal, and the Algarves, and that he spoke Portu guese, and therefore he, Joe Perelra, would vouch for him.' The Judge employed Joe to establish communication with the party and in particular to ask why they had been arrested. Putting his little gray hat between his bare feet Portugee Joe be gan an address, presumably in his na tive tongue, punctuating it by wild sweeps of his amputated arm. As soon as he finished the six began a simulta neous clamor. When the police hnd reduced them to the speechlessness from which they were so ready to break, Joe picked up his hat and tucked It under his arm. Then he drew it out and made a low bow to the court and sard: "The Portugee gentleman he says he not know." "Ask the captain why he bod them arrested," continued the court. Joe repeated his former perform ance, the same clamor arose, and out of It came Joe, with the answer: "The Portugee gentleman he say cap'n he not know." On this showing, and particularly as no prisoners' names appeared on the docket, no charge on the charge sheet and the complaining witness had been mixed up with the prisoners, the court turned them loose. Learning that the humble Portuguese was recognized as official Interpreter for the Adriatlco, the collector of cus toms sent for him and gave him order for the captain of the schooner to bring hi papers ashore. Nothing ever brought such delight to the heart of the poor, feeble-minded Joe a to be asked to do a service to some one in authority; a command from a consul was a thing ever to be remembered. In this case Joe managed to combine both, as he got the consul's approval of the collector' order, and had two 9amoans to pull him oft in state to the schooner. Returning, he ushered a party of three into the presence of the oollector. "The Portuguese gentleman, he my interpret. I bring the cap'n, also the cook. They bring the pape', pape' of the schoon' Adriatlco." "What did you bring the cook for, Joe?" asked the collector, who was not used to doing business with that functionary on vessels. "Fetoh a chair for the captain, and let the Cook and interpreter stand." "But the Portugee gentleman he ; tells an the oook very big man on the choon same thing be bos all over." Bather slighting the importantcook, the collector motioned hi acquaint ance of, the night before to take s hair, and told Joe to ask for the pa pers. But it was another who pro duced the flat tin case In which these important documents are commonly carried. This developed the fact that it was, after all, the cook on whose complaint captain and crew had been arrested on the afternoon1 previous. These papers showed that the schooner Adriatlco wa owned lu Ecuador; that she had been employed in trad a up and down the west coast of South America, and that her pres ent voyage had begun in Valparaiso, with Papeete, In Tahiti, a her destina tion. Jler complement consisted of captain and cook and two able-bodied seamen,, and she carried two passen gers. Uer cargo consisted, of wines, liquor and cigars. Here the cook produced hi baking powder tin and presented the paper which hs had shown the evanlng before. Anywhere else it would have made a great stir if a vessel should put into a port 2,000 mile dead to leeward of ber destination, but Apia, it ha been said. Is accustomed to the unusual, aud doe not feel surprised at being a port of call between Valparaiso end Tahiti. Meanwhile the schooner lay in the harbor, a tidewaiter aboard to see that none of the cargo passed the tariff pro vided by the Berlin treaty to press heavily on just such luxuries a were under tHose sealed hatches. The pri wsts report sf t&s tttewsJter was Our. H was mighty good stuff. - The peo ple from the schooner rarely came ashore. They bought little or noth ing from the butcher and the baker. There was no apparent reason why they should prolong still further thst voyage from Valparaiso to Tahiti, which bsd already been extended 1,000 miles beyond Tahiti. Still their an chor bit coral until the days measured weeks. The tidewaiter reported that they did nothing but talk all day, and oil st once. At lost, when they bad been In Apis nearly s month, it be came known that they had no money to get swsy with, snd that they hope lessly disagreed as to raising money by bottomry or by sale of a portion of the cargo whloh was consigned to order. , Therefore the municipality of Apis levied upon vessel snd cargo as securi ty for port charges. This brought the case into the supreme court, and ahed upon a remarkable transaction as much light as it i ever likely to re ceive. The eourt and Apia in general were never quite clear as to several points, but thst is only to be expected when one has to depend upon Portu gee Joe a one of what proved to be s chsln of interpreters. When the voyage of the Adriatio opened in Valparaiso there were on board, as shown by the papers. lx per son, bound for Tapeete, In Tahiti They were the captain, the cook, two sailors and two passengers. It chanced that these six persons were of six dif ferent nationalities. It further chanced that each one knew only hi own speech and one other, so that when they all talked together, as irom choice they did, only two people st s time understood one another. One of the sailor understood the captain when he gave an order; to get that order to the other sailor, who was, of course, in the other watch, it was necessary for the starboard watch to translate It to one of the passengers, who translated it again to the other, and he in turn translated it to the port watch. Thst are the difficulties of navigation added to. It will easily be seen from this how they got into the habit of all talking together, trust ing that in the babel some one would understand. It suited their peculiar conditions, even though it was apt to lead strangers to think a riot was in progress. Then something happened to mar the placidity of a voyage which should have been an idyl. The precise detail are lost in the inability of Portugee Joe to interpret. Ills account was: "Mr. Cap'n he call Mr. Cook the bad name. Then they become both angry." This must have been a Bad time on the rnclflo. One can Imagine a Yankee skipper blackguarding bis cook over the hounds of the foremast. But this vituperation on the Adriatlco muBt overpass the power of any ordinary imagination. But the result i known. The cook swore to carve the captain, the captain swore to shoot the cook. Each was unarmed, but the captain leaped into the cabin companion a the cook jumped into the galley. In a trice both were armed. The eoptain called on the watch below to arrest the cook, but he did not make himself understood until the watch on deck had started the order trickling through the two passenger. The cook retaliated by calling on the watch on deck to arrest the captain. The two orders balanced. Then all hands and the cook talked in a wild bunch until the two watches and the two passengers had let off their steam. Then they were prepared to discuss what should be done. The captain re fused to apologize to the cook, the cook refused to be placated with an apology. The captain next would not be content until the cook should be put in irons. The cook deposed the captain from hi high place. That a sea cook should do such thing aa those wa a trifle too much for even the re markable two passengers and two watches of thi very remarkable voy age of the Adriatlco. Here first appear the baking' pow der tin. The document which it con tained wa a bill of sale duly executed and conveying to the cook the owner ship of the vessel snd rather more than hulf of the cargo. In a general way it Is a prerogative of the captain to damn the cook; in foot, s cook un- damned would feel that something was wrong; but a circumstance which clearly alter the case is when your cook turns out to be your sole owner and principal shipper. It becomes a trifle awkward to learn these fact just when you bave been taking a turn at damning that cook. Ilowever.'a peace was contrived, and the cook' owner agreed to lay aside hjs knife, the captafn hi revolver. The cook would oook and tne captain , would captain until . they reached port, neither Interfering with the other, Unfortunately the cook wa the only one aboard who could read the chronometer for the captain st the morning time sight, but a owner he would not serve one of his own serv ant. Naturally the captain never knew bis longitude, and be reached Apia, only 2,000 mile out of hia way, 1 by getting on the parallel and run ning it down until it bit something. While these foot were brought out J in the supreme court at Apia, it wa decided to end the venture at that port. . The wine, liquor and cigars of the cargo vyere landed and sold st auction for what they would bring above the doty. The cook discharged the captain and crew in Apis, shipped himself ss esp tain, snd the two passenger went a the two watches. The late captain of fered to ship a' oook, and wa prompt ly put on tba articles, thus showing thst no permanent ill-feeling bad been engendered, snd thst hs bad been eon tending for the matter of principle that a captain has the right to damn hi own cook. And the crew? Ob. they wept back s port and tsrbosrX 1 passenger. Cleveland Leader. ... CZZTEL EJDULCETC3. aater sefceel Utm la ke latev MtteMlSeHeeteesepteaihee ' V' 11, 10 An. Sil-S. ' '(Based upon Peloubet' Meet Kotee.) GOLDEN TEXT. They also have erred thrbusn wine, and throufta strong drink are eut of the wr. Ia. xtff. THE SECTION Includes the study of the prophet Amos sad his work. TIME. About the middle ot tne elshth century, B. C. WO. In the reurn ' Jero boam IL (Amos lot. sad from the cir cumstances it must have been the latter halt, 7V0-7T1. oo m. chroa or Ttt-Ttf, rev. PLACE-Amoe was a native of Tekoa, alz miles south o Bethlehem. The scene ot his labors was Bethel, a royal and reuslous oeater, 11 mile north of Jeruaa- lCm" EXPULNATORT. ' L The Situation After s long pe riod of decline and partial subjection there cams a period of great outwsrd prosperity sod extension. The three victories over Syria which Elishe had promised Jossh from hi dying bed hsd been gslned. ' Hi son and successor, Jeroboam II., extended hi conquest till the kingdom, resched to the Leb anon mountain on the north (2 King 14:25); and together with Judah the ( two occupied nearly the extent of ter- itory that belonged to the united kingdom under David and Solomon, from Lebanon to the Bed sea, God through 111 prophet gsve great vie tories, an enlarged country snd un told wealth snd peace with the sur rounding nations, in order that the goodness of God might lead them to re pentance. Wealth accumulated, but men decayed. , Society from the high est to the lowest became corrupt. God sent various warning to the people. "Some were physical famine, drought, blight, locusts, earthquake; and some were political battle, de feat, invasion, captivity." Kent. II. Denunciation f of Sins. 1. "At caseinZlon:" "Those whose prosper ity has made them insensible to dan ger." Mitchell. Like Jonah in the etorm, they are asleep and dreaming beautiful dreams, unconscious of their danger. Zion. Jerusalem, the capital of Judah. "Samaria" The capital of Israel. "Chief of thAatlon:" Israel and Judah. 2. "Pass ye" over the Euphrates "un- toCalneh:" A lmge city. "Hamath:" A city of Syrin. on the Orontes. north of Lebanon. -Vt.tli:" A Philistine city on the soiuliu tot. "Be they better" than you? God has greatly favored your nation, yet how you hare requited God's goodness. 3. "Y that put far away in your thoughts and expectations "the evil day" and act as if you did not believe God's Word. 4. "Beds of Ivory," etc.: Expressing luxury and selfishness. 0. "Drink wine in bowls:" Because they were larger than the vessels or dinarily used in drinking. ilitchell. "Not grieved:" As long as they had their luxuries they had no patriotism, no care for country or for the poor. 7. "Uo captive with the first:" Since all lesser troubles had failed to lead them to repentance, there was noth ing left but captivity, which wa hast ening on apace. Within about 30 years this was fulfilled. 8. "Will L" the Lord God, "deliver ap:" The Assyrians could have done no evil unless God had permitted it. Had the people been brave, moral, united, full of religious zeal, Assyria could not have conquered them; and God' providence would have watched over them. God trie many ways to keep back people from going to their own ruin. Temperance means self-denial, self control in the presence of temptations. No one is good without self-denial in something, self-ontrol in all things. Yielding to luxury and appetite at the expense of higher things always means decay and ruin. ' Take Pains. Life principles lie hidden in our commonest phrases. Nothing is more common than for us to admonish one another to "take pains." Now there is a difference between getting a thing by laying hold of It, and by hav ing it thrust upon us. We get most of our pains by the latter process, al though we advise each other to get them more often by the former proc ess. The word "take" means not so much a passive receiving as an active seizing or grasping. All good woqk soste. In reaching out our hand for great reeults, we must understand that we are also reaching out for gTeat pains; for the one goetwith the. other. If we are willing to get benefits acci dentally and at haphazard, it is well enough to get our pains is the same way. But if we want tobe themakers of our own fortune, we must take pains. S. 8. Times. Beta? One's Self. To be our beet selves should be our imbltion not to be somebody else. A tarver needs tools of different sizes, snd temper, and shapesof cutting edge. The perfection of hi work depends on their not being all alike. So God may use u to help conform humanity to the image of III Son, We owe. it to that work to respect oar individuality, and to keep ourselves at the highest point of efficiency. Tobe usedtn the per fecting of one line In that work Ik re ward enough for any tool' being lt telf, and being worn out in the work, -fi. S. Time. s Vim and Thistles. The least man i an essential part of God's great plan. The soul of man is never sent bock to tarth for a new trlnl. ' The fruits of the Spirit ere not wind falls, but hand picked, A penny tin buys a good a tlU to leitruetioo, a dollar sin does. Those who prefer the serriee of sin, nust be satisfied with tba wage of In. , Because a sin doe not instantly fiaim a man, he Is apt to think his soul i escaped unscathed, Ham's Horn, liiit . i ports aj i at AtaalrataM Iterk Twi It is one great source of t-J orB power that ha knows nets? not merely all his brother soti but every man of official import hia own country. There u notsIi ince In Germany with which kt 5j familiar, and his memory for ' I, ana xeces is so great that see a tnan once Is to know hi of his Ufa. In this knowled. AAnntn Ha nimaiiai anw j v r v ul BUDrtf eessore on the Prussian throna ot bis contemporary sovereignT safe to say thst Queen Victoria K less of Great Britain than her cn, son knows of bis country, and case of Austria and Bussia Hiseoia ly true. This Is not such tr& matter ss M might appear. i In spite of much evidence to the trary the emperor is not a tyrant? has he manifested a desire to )! power for the mere purpose of a. ing other people uncomfortable. , takes a positive delight In heariiir, good things said or done by 0tU Ue does not fail to read what lib against him. When the late William VTih. Phelp was the American repi.. tive in Berlin, "Mark Twain" k pened to be -in town. Mr. Phelpsh, ing informed me that he bed taken, steps to let the emperor know ot u, I of course pointed out to our taig ter what I knew to be the case-n, the German emperor knew brio, the work of our great humorist a would bo most happy of an orm tunlty to talk with him. Mr. Pheu however, persisted in thinking that was not his bueinesito do anything the matter, seeing that Mr.'citntj wa not present In any official cap ity. Next day I was leaving f, America, but that evening I hj opportunity of telling the empN that Mark Twain wa in town, n moment he heard thi he clapped Q hand at the good new, and called J to his wife, who was at the other sj or toe room: "Auguste, AumJ here Is good new I What do you thitlf Mark Twain is in townl " and then J eagerly inquired about him. BuUtJ he learned that Mr. Phelps hid ie) seen fit to arrange a meeting at ot ne irownea in a signincant maom Of course Mark Twain was immeii etely invited to meet the emperor a luncheon, and both enjoyed the me. Ing. It would be, 1 think, within tU mark to say that in the last ten Ten the emperor has conversed at lenrd with every eminent American or M Ushman who has passed through lie tin. I have never heard of such a mtrv ing but that the visitor hns bee strongly impressed by his imperil host' specialised knowledge. In tit midst of the rush of festivities at Kit In 1805, the emperor found time to fiat on board the flagship New York oitk American squadron. Tier captain ki me afterward that their imperial kc stayed until two o'clock in the mm' Ing, and durlnghls stay extracted fni; them every manner of informatioi Tie closed his visit by testing the pacity of the crew for manning ity and putting out fire at the short possible notice. When Mahan p lished bis first book on the "luflooe of Sea Power," the emperor at out read it, and sent him a cordial ts gram acknowledging the indebtedna of himself and his officers for thekr sons taught therein. I hove no dot that the strenuous efforts now B( made to strengthen the German uiy have received great encouragems from the study of thi American m Personal government can be eult abused, but it is distinctly adwtr geous for a state so dependent upoin military prestige as Germany, lot century at least the foreign rtlr tions of RusbIs and Germany hi been modified, even controlled, tk occasional personal conference of two sovereign immediately Inter ed. With the Russian czar the emje- or can speak distinctly and with fear of his words being nullified byes greases or parliaments. He 1 achieved alone, by a few words Vtl the czar, important concessions China which will lead to other eooce slons more important still. If he co arrancro his relations with En?l through his grandmother alone, Ih" no doubt he would once more rerw himself as bound up with English in terests. As it la, he is bound to misunderstood: for personal go ment in England disappeared slonf with the head of Charles I. Two.W ngo I published my history of "I German Struirsrle for Liberty," "W! wo regarded by the German corner tive paper as an Impious ottoeknp monarchy in general and the tup or ancestors in particular. .vi ,.m I.U4 V..,t merelrt! ..oln noil ntabliU"k fnnla imm en American nolntof Xfv fi-Unrla nrArlirtml that thoemPi would drop the book Into his iH paper basket with a ourse upu author. , Instead of this be read it. nrdlnir tn his own statement. beginning to end, pointed out f' from his point of view, ana odi- thought no worse of me for my I") orthodoxy. Next year I publish -White Man Africa," in which I to apeak of hi relation to the Tr voal in a manner far from cot mentary. Again ho sent word tf that he hsd read the book with " est and pleasure. These two lltuej laodes dispose of the Prpctun!T) peated slander that he con nothing but praise and 'quarrel Q anyone who oppose him. Tow Blgelow, in Century. , Ummm mt AAA namb" v The Siamese hsvs a great t"5 odd numbers, and were never w&T put five, seven, nlns or eleven wu' house or temple. N. V. Son. -v-wrMfaHSs,