A CROILSUS' CI I AT12A U Vanderbilt's Palace in tho North Carolina Mountains. A Lordly Domain Amid Wildly Picturesque Scenery. George Vanderbilt's country real dunce in within a few miles of Ash Tillo, N. C, n spur of tho Dluo Mouu t litis. Hi new homo, which has been building far four years or more, is now practically completed. The home is an imposing gothia Htriicture of In diana sandstone. It is the most im pressive ami commanding of tho many residences belonging to tho Vendor bills. 1 ho mansion is not long ami low nnd rambling as most Southern dwell ings are. Instead, it rises to tho height of four stories, not counting tho lower floor where domestio work is dono, or tho story next to the roof. But it is brand and long and impres sive. Mr. Vnmlerbilt wns largely his own architect, an I tho result would indiento that ho is not a bad one. Ho has boon courageous enough to bor row literally from others, but inn inly from (Switzerland, for tho house ns Boon from a distance resemble an Al pino chateau. Tho massive mountains near by add to this impression. Tho halls in it are as wide and lofty ns those in tho old houses in England, Thoro aro no small rooms. Tho din lug halls aro immense. Thoro aro no loss thin fifty guest-chambers, an In dication that Mr. Vandorbllt does not intend to be a hermit in his mountain borne. There are several largo rooms, evidently intended to ho reception room', and there is a huge ball-room looking out upon tho moiiutaiiiM.show ing n most romantic scene by light. Tho baths aro of marble, mined from the mountains near by, and tho whole interior is rich in appearance and nr rangemout. Tho stables nt a distance alone aro finer than many modern homes and tho kennels for thore is yet gnmo in tho mountains are on n plane with the other buildings. Withal thoro is nothing glaring or garibh about all this. Many modern house would look ridiculous in the midst of the wild mountniu scenery, but Mr. Vnndorbilt has been fortunato enough to bring about harmony and to make his splendid home appear a natural part of the scone presentoil. No one but Mr. Vanderbilt himself knows what this has cost him. The mount is small compared with what it would have beon had tho estate been in the North. Land in western North Carolina when Vanderbilt purchased was ridiculously low. So wore all aorta of ordinary labor, for skilled labor bad to come from the North at Northern rntes of wages. But the building material was right at hand to be cut or mined, and nature hersolf had been the surveyor and landscape gardener as well. From his library window Mr. Van derbilt can see the Blue Ridge, the Alleghanios and their tributary moun tain ranges rising and stretching away in the distanoo. He can see Mount Pisgah raising ita pine-clad head more than 6,000 feet above the plateau. Black Domo, Clingman's Dome, Mitchell's Peak, and a soore or more of giants are near by. Botwdjfji these, like silver threads, run the French Broad, the Hiawassee and near half a dozen other rivers. He may see if he wishes the spots over in the Tennessee mountains that have been made in a way famous by the charming stories of Charles Egbert Craddock. And here and there he may see the cabins of the mountaineers. Mr. Vunderbilt's plnoe contains About 20,000 acres in the immediate (grounds or park. Several milos be yond he owns on Mk Tisgah and in its neighborhood about 100,000 aores more, intended for use as a hunting and shooting preserve. George Vanderbilt is tin student of the family. He is an ardent lover of books And nature, is unmarried, is 38 (years old, and is worth 81,000,000 for bich year of his life. Chicago Tim.-s-Ulerald. X Victim to Etiquette. k- The rigid etiju jtte which prevails na Korea as to oeremonious banquets lis ineonvenieut for strangers, whose untrained appetites, says Youth's Companion, are scarcely up to the Korean standard. An artist, luaking la stay in Seoul, was bidden to a royal least at the king's pilaoe, to his min ted joy and despair. Ignorant of Lative customs he appealed to Mr. G., the English Consul, to guide him through the ordeaL Tho one thing mpresaed upon him was this : "It is a jrcat insult to refuse what is offred K'ou at table, an 1 a greater insult not a eat till th:it is on your plate." The ucoouut oontiuues: Wo all nt down gaily, mid t!:o feast began. All the products of the conn try seemed to have been cooked and put before mo, iiielii ling moats, fish, honey, sweets, vegetables and sauces, of which, mind you, we had to eat "mountains" piled on our plates. Young pigs, in tho puppy state, wore also there, and wore much appreciated by my princoly entertainers. When I was but half way through, however, not being proviuod with an ever-expanding digestive apparatus, like my friends of Cho-sen, I really felt as if I were suffocating. I raised my eyes pleadingly to Mr, O., but ho shook his head sternly The servants, seeing me hesitate, plied mo busily with potatoes, barloy, mil let ami at least half a bushel of beans. After vainly praying for oourngo and dexterity to slide tho food under tho table. I made desperato inroads npon tho hcaped-up vegetables. Once agnin I rolled my ryes in dumb en treaty toward tho consul, who once again shook his hoad, this timo with a sardonic grin which made mo deter mine to get through tho feast some how, but in silence. After this I wns treated to lily-bulbs and radishes dipped in the vilost of sauces, besides a large portion of a puppy-pig roasted, and fruit in pro fusion, with foreign and native wines. At length, when I felt that with tho next mouthful I should groan aloud, tho end wns reached. That unhappy meal began at noon, and was brought to a close nt 7 p. m. To those who npprcointo tho pleas ure of eating, let me recommend a royal Korean dinner. No pen can du scribo tho agonies I endured as I was carried homo iu my green sedan-chair. For dnys I scarcely nto a mouthful, and to this day tho Bight of a puppy pig is unbearable. Wears on Aluminum Fur. We have hnd people with glass eyes, porcelain teeth and artificial whiskers, nnd now along comes a man with an aluminum ear. Ho is sixty threo years of ago ond was admitted into tho Queen's Hospital, nt Birming ham, England, in April, 18!):), with an epithelioma of the left auricle. The greater part of tho diseased ear was cut off by tho attending surgeon Bnd a plnster-of-paris cast was taken of tho left sido of his head. Than au artificial car was built up in wax to match tho healthy ono on the opposite sido. The bogus ear was thon made in vulcanito and aluminum, tinted and enamelled to harmonize with the com plexion. No nrtillciol contrivance, such as a spectacle frame, was made use of to support tho elumiuum ear, and adhesion to the head was affectod by means of a saturated solution of niustic in absolute alcohoL The man now can hoar as well as ever, but he takes care to sleep on bis right sido at night so as not to break off his new ear. At tho same time he has no fear of having it frost-bitten, and be is probably the only man alive who could even partly comply with the request of Maro Antony: "Lend mo your eors." New York World. Why Red Looks Black at Dusk. When the luminosity is gradually reduced, the various colors in great measure disappear, person with nor mal vision passing through stage of red-blindness, as the intensity is dimin ished before he arrives at absolutely monochomatio vision. Captain Abney points out that the curious color of a moonlight landscape is entirely ac counted for by this fact While light beooracs greenish-blue as it diminishes in intensity, and the reds and yellows, being reducod or absent, are not reflected by surrrounding objects. Honoc, moonlight is cold, whilo the sunlight is warm, owing to their pres ence. The loss of colors in flowers as night draws on may be easily followed. Thus orange-colored flowers may be plainly distinguished, whilo a. scarlet geranium appears black J green grass will be gray when the oolor of yellow flowers may yot be just visible. Lon don Lancet. An Impatient Couple, A swarthy Italian and his wife came into the Fitch: Hospital the othor af ternoon and placed ten-months-old baby, which was about as long as a pine-apple, on the operating table. The dootors examined it carefully and not being able to find anything wrong with it asked the parents what the matter was. "Oh, nothing," they answered, "only it can't walk." And the dootors laughed a hearty laugh at the idea of expeoting a baby to walk whon it is soaroely old enough to cry. Buffalo (X. Y.) Courier. The peace footing of the Russian army oalls for the services of 170,003 horses. IIATS AND PARASOLS I3UOAD RFKF.CTS THIS SKASOVS I' LA'l'l'RK IX MILL1NKKY. . florae lints Are Stylish-Fashionable Colors on Feminine Headgear ilnty Sunshades Odd fciUrts and Wulsts. I J HE tendency in the milliner's I rflortsthisncason is all toward I broad effects and the trim (i rnicg of nearly every style of flat or linnnet leans tint way. The tiny Dutch bonnets set so far back on the head that they seem lost in front are worn at teas and receptions and in me evening for young maids and ma trons, too, the nattv Nanoleon. trimmed toward fhe back or front, as fnncy dictates, is a favorite. The large bats are stylish to a degree and n model in black satin braid, had short thick plumes falling on either side, one resting on tho edge of the brira toward the front. A band of velvet with rhiucstone buckle and bunch of violets at the bnck nnd un derneath the brira a cluster of roses completed the trimming. The demand for made hats admits of considerable originality iu the manipulation of the straw braid and with the kind known as patent leather exquisite jot effects limy be obtained without the weight of the real article. Black and white nnd black nnd brown are frequently fonnd combined, tho tint of the latter used being Havana. Butter color fancy straw is also fashionable, espe cially for young girls' hats. Ribbons and (lowers for the most part form the adornment of the spring hat, the Dresden and striped effects in the latter being especially hnndsome, while the flowers are the most perfect imitations of nature's productions, some of the makers going so far as to imitate dying nature, and withered leaves, and dyiug roses are among the seasons novelties. A beautiful model for a hat is of white lace and net, the brim slightly projecting aid trimmod with soft net and sprays of orohids, nnd another is quite a flower toque, velvet pausies being combined with the lace. The bonnet pictured here with is in marron fancy straw, trimmed with roses, shaded from pink to green A BONNET HUMMED WITH HOSES. and natural foliage, plaited marron ribbon and jet ornaments. The cen ter in front forms a poiut, resting on the hair. To be worn with or with out strings. These dainty millinery adornments and their fair wearers must be shaded from the sun's rays, and the parasols are on par with the prevailing beauty in the season's fashions. The sheer chiffon is lace and aelf-ruflled in vari ous styles, and the Dresden comes severely plain and with a raffle or two and bow on top. The shirred chiffons in light tints are lovely, thejfllniy fab ric being a favorite, and a model in accordion pleated blaok chiffon won many admiring comments at a reoent exhibition, 1 or carriage use the muoh trimmed ones are oarried, but the styles for street are very handsome, plain satin with insertion of heavy lace Deing among tnem. FOB STREET WEAR. For street wear broeaded silk mo hairs, berege poplin, Venetian oloth and illuminated serges will be much worn, withcrepons in exquisite weaves of mohair and silk and all silk for call ing and reception gowns. In the first mentioned style a beautiful model was seen in mohair of a gray shade, with old rose figure and glints of green through the weave; the skirt was ex ceptionally full, tho godet plaits stand ing out beautifully and large rosettes ornamenting the side ; the bodice was trimmed with a full collar of heavy Bosnian embroidery and the full effeot was obtained by loose straps of old rose satis oaught at the neok with rhiaeatone buttons; the plain high collar of satin has loops well toward the end. The sleeves were of mohair with fnll puff to elbow. These mohairs come in all varieties of colorings and tints and in plain ef fects. In the poplins brown and white is fonnd beautifully combined and a taking style shows the soft front of the bodice of white mousseline do soie, embroidered in buttonhole stitch, and intended to be worn with r without an Eton jacket. The oloth gowns, whether tailor-made or trimmed bodioe, are beautiful, the exquisite texture of the fabrio showing to excel lent advantago and . trimmed with heavy crass linen embroidered in all manner of styles or plain silk Tuscan and ornamented with buttons of rhinetrtones or out steel they are ex tremely handsome. ODD SK1BTS AND WAISTS. As odd waiila r.n.l -'-.irU art the 10m I feature of tho season new ideas in both are constantly cropping up. This style is now standard, and will con tinue for ti me indefinite. The sum mer promises to bo the biggest cotton wnist season yet known. Now wo are wearing them of lace or net over silk I chiffon, gauze or crape over silk or satin ; velvet, the soft finished liberty satin, striped and figured changeable) tafletas and a few plaids in velvet and silk. All colors and combinations are worninthis useful garment. Sloevesare to the wrist or elbow and very lnrge. IOtI.NO Oinb'S WAtST. Fancy collars and ribbon bolts nre worn. Guipure lnoe yokes and epau let ruffles abound, nnd in many in stances a tiny fur edging finishes tho lace trimming. V elvot and chiffon are combined with nny mnterinl. Jet and ribbon nre commonly used trimmings. Home of the combinations nre silk wnist, velvet sleeves, narrow belt and collar and yoke of lace Vandykes. An other bns pink chiffon over pink silk, with pink satin ribbon bretelles and bows, as well as belt, ond a light green collar. Mink edges the collar and outlines the hretullesaud belt. Black chiffon, net or gauze waicts are made over colored silk and trimmed with black satin ribbons and a colored vel vet collar. The waists are full in ef fect, though made over a boned lining. Hix yards of silk are now allowed for a waist and the same of chiffon. TAILOR-MADE OOWNS. Nothing looks so decidedly proper as a tailor-inndu gown, either for church or shopping. Now that dress makers control tho gowns onoe mora the tailor-made ones lire uo longer lain and severe. Whipcords and igbtweiirht cheviots ure tho very thing for a shopping gown. For in stance, a light mouse-gray whipcord, made with a nkirt, a godet, not too wido nor overstiffonad with horsehair, lined throughout with a good quality of silk and perfectly plain. Tne lioilioe tits tight to the back, the fronts aro open and rounding, with a little basquiue all around. mks. btanton's quef.b experience. In spite of her eighty years, Eliza beth Cady Stanton is halo and hearty still, and appreciates a good story as muoh as the youngest of her friends. The other evening Bhe related an ex perience that befell her while lectur ing in a Western city. She had re tired shortly before midnight, and was ust falling asleep when she felt a cold touch on her hand, nnd nt the same time hoard a voice that sounded dis tinct though faint saying : "Save me, mother! More curious than alarmed, Mrs. Stanton rubbed her eyes, got up and lighted the gas, and searched every here through the room, finding ab solutely nothing. Then, concluding that it must have been an hallucina tion, she went back to bed again. But again the phenomenon irna repeatod, with the anme icy tonoh and the same voice, that soundod nearer now, and repeated the singular words: "save me, mother I All through the night at intervals this strange mauifeBtion was repeated, ELIZABETH CADI BTAWTOtt. and once it seemed to her that she was, held in a atrong einbraoe, while the voioe sonnded close in her ears. The next morning she repeated to the landlord the strange happenings of the night, and learned to her amaze nient that twenty-four boars before, in the very same room a young man bad died of delirium tremens, and all through the hours of his agony he had called out, sometimes with moans, sometimes with shrieks: "Save me, mother I" ' Now, if any one can explain this ooourrenoe Mrs. Stanton will be glad to hear from him, for she admits frankly it is beyond her ooinprehen- Plaoed end to end in a continuous line the streets of Loudon would ex tend from the Mausion Honse across the entire continent of Europu and beyond the Ural Mountains Into Asia. FORT DELAWARE RAZED. ONE OF THE OLD LANDMARKS, Its Battlements Dismantled, Ita Walla Destroyed for a Torpedo Station One ot the old landmarks that for three- quarters of a ceutury has greeted mariners as they come up the Delaware ltlvnr. Is dis appearing under the rapid work of s hundred laborer Old Fort Delaware, whore toons- suds ol rebel prisoners were con lined during the Rebellion, will soon be a thing of mem ory only. In a few months no part of the uiu uriun ana stone structure wm remain. Since IBM, Fort Delaware, foreboding and dismal looking, hn stood on a low, marshy Island midway between two states New Jersey and Delaware. It wss built at an enoimue espense to the Government nearlyhalf a million dollars and lor all the good It be ever done its presence conld easily bare been dlsponsed with alto gether. 1 lie Government .'caring that In times of wnr, Philadelphia would be a vulnerable point, eructed Fort Delaware nnd stationed a Harrison there. For SHventv-flve years utrlts trod Its ramparts, but 'in all that time, not once did the fort's big guns spout lorih t-bot or shell nt an enemy. Only tho boom of the sunrise nud sunset gun awuken ej Ibe echo-! In two slates. Fort Iielnwarn's record as a war prison Is one of death nud sorrow. Its grim walls, could they hut spend would unfold a story of many stout hums breaking many brave men dying far from home nnd f rlend. At one time In IH:l, lllteen hundred rebel prisoners were cunllued within the tort. The mortality among them wns terrible. Ilullt upon n low, swampy lslund, whose vapors were laden with mninrln germs, the deaths nt one time numbered nearly one hundred In a month. Ine prison pbysinlsns did evcry thlun In tbelr power to shock the dh)cae,but Without much success. Thore was one other cnuse of many deaths a disease horrilyiugto contemplute.Strong, stout-hearted meu eutne to the prison from the battle-Held nieu whose lives had been spent In ronmiiijt through the mountains of the Carolines they grew pale nnd haggard umler restrnlni. Then they Isid down nnd died victims of nostalgia, or broknu-beart-edness, superinduced by home sickness. Tuere wns a company ot men from Nor:h Carolina's mountainous country, who had - Inkon prisoners at the battle of the Wilderness. I hey bad faced shot and shell and lought bravely. They were all big, Iiowerlul lellows, who truppe I and bunted or a living when nt home. Coon skin cans and enisle feathers covered nearly every bead Less than a month's conflucmtut behind the cheerless walls of Fort Delaware made these llght-henrted. happy mountaineers sullen nnd nrjrose. Many of tbeui broke dowu un able to bear captivity and one by one they died. Where the old fort stands there will soon be erected a torpedo station at a cost of 18U.00D. It will be constructed on the most advance! Ideas and Is calculated to prove as lurmiua'iie a narrier to an enemy ns f ort Delaware would have been an easy mark. Urund Army Journal. THBOnANO AHMT IS OBOWIIfO, The grim old flexton gathers a eood mnnv of them In, and In time will Kather them all, but from all present indications there will be nulte an intermission before he officiates on the Inst one. Just now the Urand Army is getting ahead of him, and Is gathering the old boys into Its ranks laster by far than death is taking them out. There are still thousands of worthy comrades outside ot the ark, but tboy are coming to their sunses and getting In before the flood. At tbe lost en vampmentof E, D. Morgan I'ost, No. SU7, three llrst-elnss men. all ot whom served bouornbly tbelr tbree years' term, were mus tered into tbe rnuks, and when asked why tbey bad not Joined before stnted that they did not know tbe objects of the order feared there was some politics In it or that tbey how n iui ui peusioa grauuers or snort term men who bad seen little or no service, bul that now they knew what It really was they came to Ibe (root aud enrolled themselves. There Is not au encampment of Laraett Post but that Iroaa one to a dozen are mus tered in, aud at the encampment of Hancock rost on Tuesday another came In, nnd sis more are ou the waiting list. Nearly all thai John A. Dix I'ost has taken in during the past two yean are men oi tnis stump, aud this Is the general experience of many otbei posts in tbls city and Brooklyn. A great many are kept out by their avar. slon to secret societies, but as tbe Craud Array is not strictly to be looludej in this category tbese objections nre being gradu ally overcome. A Urand Army post repre sents a camp, and, of course, no one can get la or share its beueflts without tbe pass word and countersign. It would be a queer camp In any service that would allow nny one to pass the guard at will. There must be regulatlocs In tbe order as well as In tbs field, tbls Is about Ibe whole ot tbe secrecy. A good reoord or service, good character and ad honorable discharge ara tbe requisites for admission, and those not possessing them can keep outside tbs breastworks or stay la tbe Kusrd bouse. The reason why so many ara still out It tbe fault of tbe comrades themselves. They will not trouble themselves to overcome tbe ob jections advanced, and thus thousands ol comrades are lost to tbe order. Tbe com mander In cblet and the Department Com mauder have Issued stirring orders on this point which tbe comrades will do well to Beed. There Is pleu y ot good material out side the order yet. Nw York Press. A lilt or Hcandal. This la a bit of genuine acnndnl. Everybody likes scandal. It Is always inch a comfort to llutl one's self a little bettor than onc'a neighbor. This bit of tcniKlitl a true, too. There Is a young man now living In Chlrago who used to llvo In Washington. He wns engaged to a UKhlngton girl, but rumors con lernlug her reneheU him out In Chi :ugo. They snlil, theso rumors, that she hud gone out to supper after the theater, and looking on the wine when It was red, had become Just a little boisterous. Her Immaculate fiance came to Washington. He did not say a word to her of the rumors which had filled bis soul with horror, but be took her to the theater, and to supper after ward. The widow Clluuot wna the third party nt the supper, and the girl, like every other woman on earth, likes champagne. Her sweetheart urged her to drink, assuring her It would do her no harm whatever. Bhe drank. In fact, she conjugated the verb to drink in more than one tense. She be came unmistakably Intoxicated. Then the gullant young man slipped her engagement ling off, bundled her Into a carriage and took her home. She hasn't seen him since. Of course, be couldn't think of marrying that sort of a girl, you know. It Is thiugs like that that keen one's belief Iu the lunato chivalry of the modern geutleman from dying. We understand the man considers It a tremendous Joke nnd you may bo able to see whero tbs laugh cornea Iu, We are not. ... PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE Important Measures Considered by Oar Lawmakers. TcrsnAt The Judiciary general committee rt ibetteiiats to-day unanimously decided to re ortnftlrmstlvoly the Penrose resolution to Lexow Philadelphia, with the recommenda tion Hint tbe senate pass It. There was no discussion. Honntor Usborn of Philadelphia, who bas been the principal opponent, said be thought tbe Investigation was not a neces sity. WirmtsDAT Tbe Penrose rosolutlon for a Benste committee to "Letow" Philadelphia, passed the Hen ate this morning with only one dissenting vote. That was cost by David Martin's lieutenant Henator Osborn. Even Henator Porter voted In the affirmative. Tbe resolution was reported from the Judiciary General Committee by Henator Urady, with tbe recommendation that It be adopted. The question was was put by Lieut. Uov, Lyon, and tbe resolution was adopted bv a viva voce vote without debate. These bills pass ed finally! llegulailng Ibe publication of all legal notices and advertisements required by law to be done by county ofllunrsi house bill authorizing the board of public buildings and grounds to sot aside a plot of ground Iu the Capitol Park on which the Hixteeners As sociation Is authorized to erect a monument to the memory of F.i-doternor Curtln. Tnt-Rsnsr. Tbe general revenue bill, pre pared by tbe tax conference, was passed on second reading In the house to-day. It will Erobably go through the lower body, but It said the senate will slaughter tbe measure. The bill passed practically as It came from the ways and means committee. Tbe t mill tax on manufauturlng corporations, mu tual Insurnnce companies, nnd building and loan associations wns eliminated by the com oilttee. Tbe grangers bad nothing par ticular to any about this. The light of the day was on the tax on foreign building and loan associations. Tbe bill provides that ibey be taxed nor cent. Mr. Itlter of Philadelphia tried to hare this reduced to t mills. He was defeated. Mr. Page of Dauphin suggested a 1 per cent rate, but his amendment was benten. Mr. Moore of Chester thought he could strike the happy medium by making tbe rate 8 mills. His compromise was objected to and tbe sec tion was passed in Its original shape. NEWSY CLEANINGS. Civil war Is browing In Nicaragua. The fruit crop In Illinois will bo largo. Texas crops aro suffering from a drouth. Cholera has broken out at Mocoa, Arabia. Commorclul ngoncic retort trade improve ment. Erlo Canal boats will be towod by elec tricity. There aro 1001 dlstlllerlns In the Cnllnl States. Tho Japanese fn Chlcngo gave a peace banquet. The CnltcJ States contain 11. 0(11 medical St udvnts. Two rich silver strlkos have boon madoat Lead vl lie, Col. Itnln fell nt Hennossy, Oklahoma, for the And time siuce October, It Is said that only somo 110,009 persons have filed income returns. The drenlwl yellow fever has appeared among Hpunieh troops in Cuba. Spain has declared that alio will treat the Cuban revolutionists ns anarchists. Itnln Is falling In tho northwestern part ol Wisconsin, chocking tho forest fires. New Orleans, La., will try to secure the next Democratic National Convention. A Nebraska former plowed up nn Iron teakettle the other day containing taOOO In gold. Collector Oeorgo n. flail, Jr., of Buchanan County, Missouri, Is short la his accounts tls,400. Henry Williams, of nillshoro, Texas, killed his wife because she refused to get up and make breakfast, and poisoned himself. The setting aside of 60,000 acres of school land by North Dakota, on the Yankton rea. ervatlon, has caused a bitter feeling among intending settlors. Tho new mantel and Areolae for "The Breakers," at Newport, II. I., Cornelius Van derbilt's private residence. Is ot terra ootta. seventeen feet high and oost 175,00. The keener of the Trias Cotintv f Ken. tucky) Poorhouso has secure.) a minister, at his own expense, to preach to the Inmates ol tbut institution, of which be has a ohargo, every second Sunday. In Texas the cotton weevil has survived the Winter and will do great damoire. It will m. duco the cotton ylold twenty-live por cent this year. The Government has sent experts to study tbe situation and Texas la urged to take action as a State. Tho great wheel at Earl eour. London. Imitated from Chicago's great Ferris wheel, is finished, with the exception of the wood work. It Is said to be an Improvement and is much larger than tbe Chiongo wheel and has been sixteen months In building. A large wholesale butcher, of New Tork City, said that the consumption of beef ha! aiien on ininy per cent, since tne reoent ad vance In price. The advance was only tea per cent, but would have been muoh more hod the consumption remained the same. World's Fair diplomas awarded to exhlbl. tore whose exhibits were favorably men tioned by the Judges are being prepared at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and win do sent out in anout sixty days, together with the modals now beluu struck at the Philadelphia Mint. Papers have been filed In the United Rtatea Court of the Western District of Wisconsin, by the attorneys for the Sterling Il imedy Company, of Chicago and New York, in a suit for ustoppnl and lamages against an Imitation of No-to-hae, the tobacco habit cure. The action la brought against a con cern called tbe Eureka Chemical Company, Can a Plant Sec? I wns tending somo of my morning- glory vines that were growlug near a fount upon which I had smull cords at tached. All of the vines had climbed up the rortls except one, or rather a large branch from one of thein, which bung out about fifteen Inches. It was swaying around, and appeared to be reaching for a slender pole that leaned against the fence at least a foot away from It I was busy some time la the vleinity of this, and would occasionally glance In tbe direction of it It seemed to me that tbe vine saw the pole and endeavored to catch hold of It with Ita little booked band, for It sway! over aa near as an inch from It, nnd I felt sure that tbe little band meant to hold on as soon as it got near enough. I became so Interested that I sat down quite near, Intending to watch It until It succeeded, for I thought It jrould. But I was called away to meet a visitor, and when tt was released U was near tea time, and In discharging tbe many little obligations of tho hour 1 forgot my vine. Tbe next morning 1 hurried to look ot It,, and, euro enough, It bnd caught hold of the pole aud wound It self three times nrouud It. I think tbe vlue saw the pole. Miss Old "I would never get mar ried If I had to ask tbe man." Miss I'enrt "Maybe you wouldu't then."- Philadelphia Inquirer. g