IP VOLUME 2. KKYN()U)SVILLK, l'KNN'A., WKDNKNDAY MARCH 11, NUM. (Kit ill NIGHTINGALE!. Besuttfnt mtiat bo the nuiuntnlna whenre f And brlsht In the fruitful tnlloy a the streams whrrofrnm Vn Irnrn jnnr win. Whrre nro those alarry wooiN? Oh, tnlulil I wniuh-r I hero Anions: the tlowofe. which, hi thnt henronlr nlr, llloom the yrnr Inng. "Key. hnrn-n era those mountains nod spent llieatri-m. Our miiik In Ihv voice nf ih-slrii Hint Imiiiitsour lllt'HIUft' A throe of the In-art, Whose pining visions tllm fiirlililili-n hones pro found. No dylnit csilrnre nor Ionic aluh run sound For nil our art. "Alone aloud In the rnitnred ear of mm We our our dark nocturnal M-i n-t, nnd thi-n Aa nlnhl law Ithilniwn From these an rrt springing mi-nilsnnd burst ing hnuiiha of May Dream while the Innumerable rhnlr of dny Welcome the dawn." -Hobert Bridges. THE KING HAS l'ETS. THI3 REFERS TO THE LION AND LIT TLE ANIMALS HE LOVF8. A Professional Trulnrr of Wll.l Anlmnte Trlla Nome liitri-i-stliig Iiirlilrnta The Feiirlraani-aa nr I'lgi-ona Among the Klnge of llenata. The way lit tin treat tho tiny creatures of animal life in n study. It may be that there It some animal language, nnd Unit the legend of the lilt In mouse which pav ed the llon'n life lV gnawing thn net ban liecnm-1 known to the donixenn of tho iungle mid handi-il down ns anitiial folk ore, or it may be I hut thn king of beasts )ns n positive contempt for anything ex tremely small, but it Is nevertheless n fact that lion will not nttack tiny ani mals when they nro put together. Pro fessor Edwnrd Darling, than whom thern Is no more profound Btudent of n lion's life nnd character lu the country, has made many curious experiments with his five big beasts. "I never saw n lion kill a rnt or a mouse," said Professor Darling, "and I have had many of them put in the cage with my five linns. My attention was first drawn to this when I was on my way from London to Hutavia, in Java, en the ship Rotundo. 1 had my five lions with me, nnd in thn quarter of the ship In which they were homed wero many rats. One day I saw Leo, my favorite Hon, lying down and holding between Ills paws very loosely a monster ship rat. I thought perhaps that the cat instinct in the lion had mnile him catch it nnd that he would probably play with it awhile, then entit, anil so I watched. Im agine, however, iny surprise when I saw him loosen the rat, nnd the rat made no attempt to get away, but ran up nnd over his gigantic paws and played with him. "We were a long time making a trip, and every day this ship's rat went into Leo's cage, and the two played together as gently as two little children. 1 made several attempts to capture the rnt, hop ing that perhaps I might take it ashore with me, but I could not succeed, and I promise you that old Leo did not like nt all my attempting to interfere witli his pet. When we got to Java, we had to take the lion out, and Leo had to lose, his pet. Lie could have killed that rat a thousand timet, but he never did it. "There was another instance subse quent to this where Leo had a pet rut, which makes me believe that the lion has a real fondness for the rodent. It was in 1H81 in Calcutta. We were playing at the Mnidan, one of those gigantic pluccs in far India, nnd when I went in to see my pets one morning I suw that Leo had found another rat for a pet. My five lions were all together, but this rat would play only with Leo. There were many other ruts in tho place, but the other lions would not look nt them. It seems to me to be a fact that the lions consider these little animals too small to be touch ed. I have known of ruts being found dead in a lion's cngo, bnt I believe that they were simply killed by the lion roll ing on them or stepping on tliem through carelessness, hut lions never eat thorn. "In Hamburg once I knew a case of a ick tiger to whom it was deemed neces sary to give some fresh, warm blood to tone np his system, and to further this end a live rabbit was put iu the cage with the tiger. Oue would naturally suppose that the tiger would have killed it instantly, but such, however, was not the case. The tiger played with the rub bit for days before he would touch it He finally killed and ate it. "Now, my theory is this: A lion, or a tiger, or in fact any wild animal kept alone, grows very lonesome. In their natural stato wild beasts always run in pairs. They love companionship, and when put alone they become so lonesome that when another animal, even though . it is a rabbit, is put in the same cage with them, they refrain from killing it so as to have its companionship, We have heard of many instances of men being alone shipwrecked, if you like making strange friends. Why not a lion? It al ways made me feel rather bad to think of this tiger in Hamburg killing his little friend. Still even men at timet turn on their friends. "Now, there is another pecnlinr thing about lions, added Professor Darling, "and that is that they will not eat the flesh of a fowl. You might tempt them With n canvasbuck duck or the daintiest squab, but tbey would refuse it. This is a soieutiflo fact. I have tried it many times. I remember once having a swan which had broken its wing. We killed it, dressed it carefully and threw it into the cage of the lions, but tbey would not touch it, and it finally had to lie taken out nnd thrown away. I hnve reieated ly put jilnnoiid nllve into thn cngn, just to see what tliry would tlo. 1 hnve thrown grain down mining thn linns, nnd the pigeons have nt-tiiiilly got down nnd hopis-d nrotind thn big brutes. -vi-ii hop ping on their Imcka, thn lions tanking no nt tempt to disturb Hu tu, even seeming to enjoy their cotnpnnionship. "Now, there is something strange ill Mint thin which in rnlhi-r ilifllciilt toex philn. To my mind It argues that n linn ct not lirntnl in his instincts. Savage Iih undoubtedly In. Fierce nt nil times, lint fierce with jnstico. I believe every one of my Hons hun n conscience. I know pvi-ry one of them known the difference U'tweBii right nnd wrong. They know their wondrous power nnd nrn ehnrlta ble. They would never attempt to in jure something which in no way could do them harm. The ntndy of n lion hi hnliitn, diameter nndcnpitliilitien Inono of the most interesting 1 know. It offers n field M yet comparatively unknown, but the more one goen Into It thn more time one takes to find nut just what a lion in mid the morn tin Ih convinced that lie hail rightly been named thn king of beasts." Now York Tribune. BfcCAME A THIEF WHILE INSANE. NtirrtnlHK lUiloNiirra follow the Iti-ttirn til n t'onvlere lt-n-Mn. Three yearn (if imprisonment hnvii lifted the cli'd from thn mind of n man supposed to lie n coluiuiill hnl'sii thief, Imt wli.i is now revealed hh Hi. Herbert Spencer, lorinerly n prosperous London physician. As u climax to his slriiiign adventure the hoard of pardons will hit at oncn petitioned for his release from the eastern penitentiary in Philadelphia. tin Kept. S."i, lmil, three horses were stolen Iroin tho stable of (1. V. Yoimg- iniiii in thin city. Tho thief wan easily trucked and was captured nt Mount Pleasant. Pa. In effecting his capture nn ntllcer was shot in thn hip nnd an other was wounded in tho arm. Thn horse thief had a gunshot wound In tho sido, and one nrm wan nearly torn fiom the cocket. Iln was brought back to Williaiiisport and locked In the county jail. While in prison he made half a dozen attempts to end his life. Ho was tried In DecemlM-r, 1WM, tinder the name pf Herbert Spencer Darwin, was convicted and sentenced to the peniten tiary for 4 years. Ilefore sentence was pronounced it whs pretty conclu sively shown that nt tho time of his trial the man was insane. Ho has spent over two years in prison, and until tho first of tlio present year ho showed no change in his character or actions. Then caiiin a sudden and startling de velopment. Tim condemned thief, who had shown so many signs of insanity and whoso bungling iii tempt to Flea I three hoises was easily overthrown, showed signs of returning reason. (Quickly these, signs multiplied, nnd now the prisoner, seemingly a perfectly ra tional man, nnnounces his identity. He is not Herbert Kpencer Durwin, but Dr. Herbert Kpencer. Ilecame to thin coun try in 1800 with (1,0(10 in rash. He In tended to locato in tho United Htntes. Boon after bis arrival his mind be came a blank, mid ho recalls nothing that has happened the meanwhile. Through the penitentiary officials ho learned where ho had been tried and convicted. Hnfllclont proof has been gathered, it is nsserted, to establish thn truthfulness of Dr. Kpencer sclui ins that ho whs insane when he stole the horses nnd noiuly overstneo. Friends will nsn every effort possible to linvnthrfunfoitii nute prisoner set free, Williiiuisport (Pa.) Dispatch. C'ltlnrae (Jamming. Gambling debts are pre-eminently debts of honor in China and are more willingly and speedily paid than any oth ers. To pay them a Chinaman will pawn all his property and even Bell his clul dren. For this he is regarded by the publio as worthy of all praise, and the relatives who allow themselves to be sold are treated as models of filial devotion, Meanwhile a tradesman to whom a debt is due may starve, Asiatic Uuzutte, A Vacation For Nome One. Mrs. Clark How is the contested will case coming on, Mr, Dower? Mr. Dower It's nil settled and in my favor. Mrs. Clark I congratulate you. I sup pose you'll toon be taking your family to Europe? Mr. Dower No, bnt my lawyer it go ing to take his. Soundings. Poetofllee Insurance. The English postmaster general is em powered to insure tho lives of persons between the ages of 14 and 05 years for not less than kJ5 nur more than fciiHi, and to grunt aunuitics of not more tiiun f jUO on the lives of persons of the age of 5 years and upward. The aunuiiies are old in connection with the potsiufllee savings bunk department. An Auclont Cluino. "Say, Red and Green, do you know that football's ono of the oldest games known?" "Bo? Where did you learu that?" "Here in Exodus, where Pliurouh's daughter found Moses in tho rush line.' Philadelphia- Cull. For thumpooing the hair nothing is bettor than plenty of tar soap and hot Water. It is belter than castilo even and makes a tine soft lather. A little. borax or a tublvspoouful ol ammonia in the water is also good for oily liuir, but too much of either turns the hair gruy. THE CALCIUM MAN'S VIEWS. tag f.utnlnnrlea From Hitherto Iln- rileeiiaaed Point of Vision. Actors nrn curious folks," observed tliecnlcinin light manipulator of one of llui np town tlientern to n reporter tho other night. Ho whs breathing upon thn rellector nnd then polishing It care fully with a woolen rug. "Curious In what respect? naked trie re potter. Oh, they re queer creatures In ev ery way, returned thn other. wuglil not I to know? I've been everything connected with ft theater from usher to scene shifter, hut Lord preserve me ftom icing nil netor! They get more money thnn most folks, but they never hnve cent. Off the stage they're the biggest cranks in the world, nnd on thn stngo they're cranky enough, Lord known. Now, look at mn and my profession, for Instance. Any one would think that I'd he In solid with thn netors, seeing thnt I light 'ma up In pretty poses and bring out tho effective parts of tlie scenes. Put, would yon believe It, if these stage folks had their wny I II bo bounced !ifl times n week by thn iiiiin ngcnicnt. Everybody Hint hoofs It be fore the footlights kicks at me from the chorus to the star nnd from the second comedian to the stipe. 'There s 2(H) gray hairs in my head, (or which tln-se serpen! iue dancers nic responsible. They're kickers with a Vengeance, on mid nil the boards, Now, I guess I know more about thn eflcct of lighting than they do, but whenever they comn hopping on the stage I never catch 'em soon enough to their notions.. When they swing iiroiiud in the butter fly dance, they start nlT il liferent every lime, mid If the light glances off 'em for tho eighth of u second tbey in wild with rage. It's their conceit, you know. They wnnt to look sweet (H) seconds In tho minute. Then they complain that I catch 'em in the eyes nnd blind 'em, wheteas it's the continual changing of their regulation poses that rattles me. "Then, when it conies to the chorus, oh, myt If they hud things their wny, the leading lady wouldn't be illuml anted ntull. There Isn't one of 'cm that doesn't want me to show 'em up for u full minute for the benefit of their gen tlemen friends in thn audience. They besiege mo every night for iavors in this way, nnd i promise oh, yes, I promise III light 'em. Hut do I doit?" The calcium man rubbed his forclin- ger and thumb In a suggestive way. "If there's n little hair dollar fen fotth coining, llu-y get a flash for2.'u sec onds, No feu, no flush!" New York Mccordcr. An Annrilole of Mr. Chllila. This Incident has been related of Mr Chllds, nnd 1 believe it has never been printed. .Stunning oun of his head cm ployeiHone day, Mr. Cbilds said: "You are not looking well. I think you must be working too haul. "I tin not feeling very well, Mr, Cbilds, that in n fact," was the answer "hut 1 guess I will bo ull right in n short tlmo. "How would you like to take a trip to Furope?" said Mr. Cbilds, smiling pleasantly. "Well enough, sir," whs the response. "but I cannot afford it. "You can afford it, "said Mr. Cbilds. taking him by the arm, "if 1 pay your expenses and pay your salary to your family whilo you are gone, can t you? The result was the man spent two months in hnropo nnd returned com pletely restored to health. "That was one of the best invent incuts I ever made," chuckled Mr. Childs when tho matter was called to his attention. "Why, Mr. re turned so much improved in health thnt ho could do twice as much work as ho could befuro ho left. You son, I whs tho real gainer by the transaction. Ono of Mr. Childs characteristics wns that he nover seemed to tnko nny credit to himself for doing a kind act. Now York Press. Curing tobro Illle With Hlryelmlne. Homo alleged instances of cures of cobra bite are reported from India, but thero is always the doubt that in tho "recoveries" reportod there wns really no poison injected, for tho coin a does not inject poison every time it bites. It Ib stated that some cases of cobra bite bavo been cured by the hypodermic in jection of strychnine, nnd full details will he awaited with interest, for it is possible thnt Btrychnine may bo antug ouiutic to the peculiarly deadly poison ejected from the fangs of tho cobra. The poison of that snake in, as a rulo, bo rapidly effective that few occasions oc cur where a remedy can be applied with infill-lent promptitude to determine whether it is effective or not. All statements about alleged cures are, however, worth careful investigation, for nu untidoto may at last be found. biiglieh Muchunia. How Was It? "My cood woman," said the learned judge, "you must givenu answer in the fewest posBiblo words of which you are capable to tho plain und simple qucs tion whether when you wero crossing the street with the baby on your urui and the ouinibus was coming down on the right side nnd the cob on the left, and the brougham wns trying to puss tho omnibus, yon saw the plaintiff be tween tho bionghnm nnd tho cub, or whether nnd when you suw him ut ull, mid whether or not near tho brougham, cub and omnibus, or either, or any twoj and which of them respectively or bow it was." Methodist Protestant. AN AUTOMATIC LIGHTHOUSE. There la Nn Keeper, but the llrlKht l.ls'il Itlnana 1'erprl unity. A remarliiibln lighthouse is the one which sheds its warning rays from nil es tuary of Ihe (llronde, in France, where It stands iisn nn isolated rock In the midst f a treacherous reef. 1 he iK-ciiliarlly of his lighthouse Is that it In unoccupied, ud Vet its lamp Is burning perpetually. Thn famous Eddy-stone light on the coast of England, rising from n rock flint is only large enough to afford a foundation for thn slructiirn, Is remarkable lieeansn the men having it in charge urn nbln to nvo their con lined quarters only oneo In three months, when a vessel comes to them with supplies, letters, papers and a pew detachment of watchers. It was to do away with this exacting and lonesome life that the French engi neers set themselves about thn task of devising a method by which the useful ness of thn lighthouse could lie main lined without so much personal atten tion. It thus happened that a lamp won Invented that would burn continuously for two months without being trimmed or replenished. Tin- burning fluid used in Ibis lamp In an ordinary mineral oil. The tills-in the nteriorof the lamp is furnished Willi a wick having a thickness three times ns great nn those employed generally in ightliouses. Around the burning sur face of the wick is a enko iniuln of a pat ented preparation consisting largely of arlioiiiz -d tar. This protection assures Ihe ilurul Ion mid the uniformity of the flame. A chimney inadn of mien is placed around the flame, and this in sures nn increase ill tin) power of the light. Tho supply of oil Is assured by menus of u reservoir containing 100 quarts, thn lump consuming fit) grams each hour. Io provide always lor t no reservoir Is-ing furnished with sufficient fuel a gauge Is fixed nt its side that gov erns llin supply flowing in from nuother reservoir nt a distuncn, and this gauge permits Just fi() grains s-r hour to twrco- lute through the little supply pipe into the supply reservoir. Tim diameter of the lantern is no inches and it cost $1.4110. Thn intensity of the light keeps ciMiiihli! until the expiration of two months, when It is necessary to visit the lighthouse and replenish thn wick. Tho light can bo seen more thnn 13 miles nt sea. Thn wick is cleansed and drawn up gradually by the nction of the tar cuke at its mouth. The French government is arranging to put ttpothcrs of t lies') houses, and it is also perfecting an invention by winch a perpetual elec tric light can be controlled by wires run niug through a Hiibmuriue cublu to the the land. Exchange. Hnnl liepoalta In Ntenm llollera. A very simple method of preventing hard deposits in steam Millers is men tinned by M. Hclimidt., a French en giins-r. There are two boilers in use lit the same time, one being at real., and the water In nsn is very bad, being very calcareous and maguesic, with orguuio matter, chlorides ami a little sulphate of of lime, Each boiler is allowed to go on working for about COO hours before being cleaned, when it Is stopped, with the water in it, and ullowed to cool down for alsnit a week. The masonry is allowed to liecome cold, and then the tap is opened, also tho safety valve, bo that tho water runs naturally ont of the boiler, the latter, when empty, being en tered and simply swept. Tho deposit, being in the form of damp mud, is eusily swept awuy, leaving the boiler as clean inside us if it were new. This method has been in use some five. years nnd seems to show thut the ordi nary burdening of deposits iu boilers is duo to tlio absence of water in them while the mud and tho iron nro lieing heated by thn brickwork when the boiler bus been emptied by tho ordinary metli od under pressure. It is necessary, how ever, under this system, to be ublo to do without tho particular boiler for some eight days. Now York Sun. The Henae of Hlifht. Like every other sense, thut of sight improves by use under healthy condi tious, and thereforo tho people who have the greatest exercise of their vision in the opeu uir under the light of the sun have the ls-st eyesight. Generally speak ing, savage tribes possess the keenest uye- sight, acquired through hunting. Natives of the Solomon islands are very qnick at perceiving distant objects, such as ships at bcb, and will pick out birds concealed in deu'o foliugo soma 60 or 70 feet nigh. bheplierds and sailors are biassed with good sight. Eskimos will detect a white fox in the snow u greitt distunce away, while the Arabs of the deserts of Arabia have such extreme powers of vision that on the vast plains of the desert they will pick out objects invisible to the ordinary eye at ranges from one to ten miles distant. Among civilized peoples the Norwegiuns huve better eyesight than most if not ull others, as they more generally fulfill the necessary conditions. The reason why defect ivo eyes are so much on the in crouso iu this country, and in Europe lies in too much study of books in early life and in budly lighted rooms. Brook lyn Eagle. Tuua of l' trifled Flab. In tho north western part of Colorado thero is a region several hundred square miles in extent which is liierally a vast deposit of potriiicd fish of all sizes and shapes, these ti.sh lieds sliulo contuin- ing fish remains are about 150 feet in thickness and extend np and down the Green river for a distance of 150 or 200 miles. Detroit Timet. HE COLLECTED THE BILL. Ukewlae Obeyed Ontere nnil r.atnbllabeil a llepiitntlun Unit Mnile Him. "When I wns a youngster of 17," said n successful business man, "I got job nn a collector with a man who was about ns strict a martinet ns I ever aw. Iln Insisted on every thlnt; being ntiii just ns ho snid, nnd thern were times when life wns veiilyn burden, but 1 stuck In him for six months; then we had n difference). It was this wny t One morning be called inenp nnd hand- d men hill on a man I knew. Ho said for inn to tHko It around nnd collect It. " 'It's mm of our Btatidbys,' he mild, and every collector I ever sent to him reported him absent or not flndabloor something. Now, yon go nnd don't como bnck here till yoa see him.' '"Do you mean that? I asked an two or three clerks Itsikcd np. " 'Yon know mn,' wns all he snld in reply, and I went ont nfter my innii. 'Ho wnsn t nt home, the peoplosnid, and wouldn't bo for six weeks. Hoi stuck thn bill In my pocket nnd went olf up tho country for n visit. Thn old man sent nfter mn half a dor.en times, hut my folks could only tell I was out of town, nnd 1 never paid nny attention to n letter I got from the boss, but went on enjoying myself. Tin n I came back and bad a visit with some other friends, and nt tho end of six weeks I railed on my man iigaiu with the bill. I found hiinat home and told him what I had done, nml ho paralyx -d mn by paying tho bill, with Interest. Two hours later I stepped Into tho boss' of fice. ' 'There,' 1 said before he had timoto gather his wits, 'is thn amount of your bill nnd Interest. Iln was out of town for six weeks, and 1 couldn't seo him before. You told mn not to comn buck till I did see hiiii. and I wns obeying your Inst rtu lions. 1 had a rattling good time, and the liousoowcs iiinsix weeks' salary.' 'The old man gasped, got blue In tho fnce, nnd 1 thought he wns going to ex plode, but he didn't. Ho gulped it all down nnd stuck out his hand. "'Young mnn,' he said, 'yon ought to have been a soldier. I mn going to put you in chargn of the collection do- iirtineut nnd double your salary. And," concluded the merchant, "when 1 was 8-' I wus a partner." Detroit r reo Press. An Anintear Tinker's fttperlenee. A well known merchnnt of thlH-clly, who is of m saving disposition and of a mechanical tin of mind, has an Incli nation to attempt to do everything. He considers nothing well done that ho does not do himself. Tho other evening ono of tho clocks at his liouid refused to keep time, so he thought ho would re pair it. He had repaired many a clock before and had not thn lesst doubt of bis skill. Ho took all tho wheels Hiid pinions apart nnd cleaned them. This occupied tho entire evening, and when bo retired he dumped all tho cogwhee.'s and parts of the clock Into a drawer in bis desk. Tho merchant Is unfortunate, at least ut tliis timo, in possessing a son of mischievous disposition who happen ed to como across tho drawer full of wheels. Ho knew what his father had been doing nnd thought he would hnve a little (un. Ho went to his room where he had a wheel that had been taken from another clock and placed this in tho drawer with tho other "fixings." That night tlio father commenced hit work of putting the separate parts to gether. Ho tiled it several, times, but always hud one wheel leftover. Tho next night ho tried the problem oncn more. Aguin he failed. For two weeks he puzzled over his mecbanicnl problem, ulwuys having a wheel left over for which ho could not account. Finally Ihe sou, who hud been enjoying tho sport, told his parent of bis little joke. Then he wished ho hud mudo no confes sion. Pittsburg Dispatch, Ilroncboa and Mnatnnge. Toiidcrfect, by the wuy, aro very apt to mix up tho terms "broncho" and "mustang." The mustang is literally a wild horse thut is, ono whose fore fathers have nevor been in captivity und whose ancestry it believed to be derived from thn hoises of the old Spanish in vaders whilo the bronchos are the chil dren of cow ponies, or dorses which have been used and which have been turned out on Ihe range for the pur pose of breeding. These horses are branded, and thn colts belong to the man whose brand is on tho mother. Horses are rounded np every year, and the colts aro caught nnd branded by the owners of the mares with which they are found running, and when they be come of breakable age tbey are taken by the men whose brand they bear. Of coarse there is more or lest of false branding, bnt where a "hustler" is found engaged in this Industry be it generally sent to a pluce where horses are not supposed to exist and where thero is no temptation for him to in dulge the fad. New York Mail and Express. Metrlmnulal Item. Chumly How the mischief did yoa come to marry that old widow? Why didn't you marry the daughter? Benedict I thought over the matter carefully. If I hud married the daugh ter, I'd have had the mother on my hands anyhow. Then I'd have had both on my hands, but as it is, now that her mother is provided for, very likely some body else will murry the duugliter, and then I'll only huve one of them to pro vide for. Texut Siftiugs. Inlreiluetlnn nf ttnrelnpee. The late Henry L. Llptiutu of Phila delphia gives this interesting statement regarding thn early nsn of envelopes In this country: "About 1H 13 nngtimmeilnu-vi-1oh-s made their first apsnrnuce ns a new linHirlatlon from France, end I wns li e first to begin their manufacture in ti ls country. Shortly afterward 1 Im proved them by milling gum to thn flaps, and thn gummed enveloH-s I niadn wero thn first which bad Isi-n seen nnywlii-m, and thn first envelos-s of any kind used by the United Rtati-s government wero ninilo by inc. Thn demand nt first wns very small. Envelopes were ns difficult to iutroduco as any new Invention or Im provement la at thn present time, and they were considered only us a lcmK rary fad which would ssm go out of fashion again. Thnt Is thn reason I did not patent or pnsh them very hard, espe cially as I had a ginsl trndn In seals nnd tealing wax and feared that envelopes would Interfere with them. At first they wero only used for business pur poses, nnd It was nomn time before they wero employed in swjlul correspondence, an a js-rson was considered lacking In rn-siH-et to a friend when he had to lick the gum on the envelope sent him. I also wade thn first iiiucilii'ro known In tho United States, nnd wlu n post ii go stamps wern introduced thn contractor had to comn to mn to learn how the gum wns made, and I gave1 him thn Information gratis." . He l-oiitil Sot llenr the hrnna. "I saw an amusing experiment," snid Henry Waller of Omaha. "Kouio ono stated that no man could stand a quart of water dropped on to his hand, drop by drop, from u height of two or throo feet. A bystander ls-t $.'0 to $1 that ho could, nnd thn wager was accepted. In less than a minute thero wan a blister on thn man's hnnd n d In less than three minutes his facave evidence of intense nfferiug. Dere a pint had been drop ped he gave np exhausted and deseritmd the sensation an the most terriblo one ho had ever exiK-rienced. The man who pocketed the $'il) offered to give odds of 10 to 1 that no one con Id stand a pint of water dropped on his head drop by drop. When ho could find no takers, he volun teered the statement that no one could have gone through tho ordeal and retain his reason, a statement nobody present teemed qualified or anxious to contra dict." St. Louis Olobe-DomiK-rat. A family llorae. The editor of the Hawkinsville (On.) Dispatch recently published tho follow ing notice: "Wo have a good, gentle, family horse that wo aro anxious to ex change for a good possum dog or a rea sonable amount of fish bait. Tiu-re is positively nothing wrong with the horse but bis voracious apjMtite. We huvo hud him with ns now about two weeks, and be has eaten np three loads of cy press shingles, two lot gates, licked tho Ixittom out of a cast Iron sugar kettle and commenced on the gable end of our residence, and the fact is wo have just got to swap, sell or kill or bo without a house or home." Ion't C.'ron-d the Auctioneer. There la a diamond of rare value and One water lying in tho heait of tho Bank of Englund vaults that has come to England from theOrange Freo State, where it was fonnd by a miner. Tin stone weighs nearly H00 carats and is thn largest in the world. There is evi dently to be tome competition bctwoi-n would be buyers, among whom is the German emperor. Tho viilue of the diumoiid when it win estimated by the Free Stiito government mine inspector was 25,000, bnt the price now put np- on it is 1,000,000. London Court Journal. i Wanted a Plnno. Wife We must huvo a piano. Husband We are neither of ns mu sical. Wifo I know, bnt what Is home with out a piano lump? New York Weekly. A sentence from a review of a novel printed in The tueen, an English pub lication, ia suggestive. It ran, "Tho talo is a nicely told one, and no girl who has the responsibility of making ontenitaVlo library lists for her moth er'! reading noed feci any hesitation about including it among tho novels." One hundred domestic servants are killed onnnully in England in tho proc ess of window cleuning. An invention recently patented is a window of which the outside may be cleaned without ex posing tho cleaner to any chanco of a tumble. i The grip bacillus, which has beet cultivated and photographed tiir.n and again, has tho appearance of being a fine thread strung with nnmeTous mi nute bead. In Purls tho theater will check the bicycles as it will a coat, nnd the bur room has pumps and repair outfits, as our own hat lunch counters and stock tickers. A loaf made from two pounds- of flour will weigh 3 pounds S!j onucet when taken from the oven. Wild tobacco has been fonnd growing In Texas, and it ia claimed that fur deli cacy of perfnme and strength of leaf the plant is not surpassed by the real Ha vana. From Cambridge comes this definition of a popular game, "Football is the pursuit of blown leather by blown hu manity.