STORY OF AN OYSTER TOLD BY HIMSELF ABOUT HIMSELF AND HIS TRIBE. The Trial anil Tribulation of the ' Baeculeat Bivalve Front the Time of rinnlnK t ntll III Appearance an the Flahmonnrr'l (nantfr, There were nbout iwo.000 of us when, ns tiny ftiikon of spawn or "spot," os the oyster spawn In called we (Ion tod out Into the water one day on "tho flats." At Drst wo were white and apparent ly lifeless. Then wo turned gray nnd finally block. At thin singe wo became visibly alive. For several days wo floated, tlio sport of waves nnil tides. Borne of my brothers wrro rnrrlcd out to sea mid mo vanished; others were swallowed by fish. At Inst wo nil be gan Instinctively to Kink tnwnrd the bottom. Then began again terrible ilewli no tion. Stony foil on mud the most fa tal tiling n young oyster enn do. Those perished at onee. Others attached themselves to plnnts nnd weeds which grow nt the bottom of the soa. They lived for a time so Ioiik at lenst as tho plant remained alive. Then, when the plant died, they perished ns Well. Fortunately for myself, I drifted on to a bit of "culteh" that Is to say, ono of the old shells which the dredgers and oyster men so cnreftilly scatter nil over tho sen floor of an oyster bed. I nettled with my deep shell uppermost and my flnt or right shell nearer tho ground. At the time I did not know why I did this. I have since realized that It was because In that position I should be more easily able to eject tho sand and grit which a rough sen some times stirs up In shallow water. I nt tnehed myself (Irmly to my nnchorago of "culteh" and felt myself at last fair ly started In life. Soon I noticed that every single mor sel of shell or stone around mo was tenanted by tiny oysters, all lying In the same position ns myself nnd all firmly anchored. Them I lay, unmovlng, for nearly a year. Food, in the shape of tiny nnl mnlculne, which an oyster loves best, was plentiful. When tho water was thick with it, we all opened our shells wide, and, making currents In the wa ter by means of the tiny hairs which fringe our gills nnd which men call our beards, we washed the dainties Into our mouths. Our choicest delicacies were the minute green ulgre, which give to full grown oysters that greenish tinge that is tho mark of the aristo cratic native. When I first anchored myself, I was but tho twentieth of an Inch In diame terso small, indeed, that a microscope would have been necessary to examlno me. At that stage my Bliell was per fectly transparent. At the end of ten months I had in creased la diameter to fully the size of a dime and become what is called "brood." During all this time I bad been learn ing many things. I found out that It was necessary to close my shell tight when dangers of Various kinds threat ened, when tho tide was low or, In win ter, when frost was severe. You may perhaps imagine that an oyster is a creature of such low organism that It cannot see or feel much of what Is go ing on round about it Hut you are wrong. The mantlo fringe of an oyster Is very sensitive. If you watched us from a boat in calm water, you would see that the tnero shadow of tho bont crossing on oyster bed will cause those of us upon whom it falls to close our hells Immediately. It was necessary to be most careful. Dangers wcro many nnd terrible. Sea urchins prowled among us and de voured many. But of all our foes tho worst Is the fire fingered starfish. One of my sisters, anchored not a yard away, fell a victim to this terror of the oyster beds. It clutched her with Its long fingers. She closed her shell. But the creature was not to be shak en off. Hour after hour It clung thcro until on the second day after Its first grip she, poor thing, opened her shell to get a mouthful of food. At once the tarflBb Injected Into her a fluid which stupefied her so that she could not close again. Then the monster turned Itself Inside out, shot Itself Into the open shell and devoured her. Then, one day a year after I had floated as "spat," came a startling change in my existence. Something huge and heavy, came out of the shad ow of a boat above and approached, rasping and grating along the bottom. It was a great triangular dredge of wrought Iron. At the bottom was a flat bar with a blunt edge, known to tlie dredgers as the "bit" As the "bit" approached It scraped the bottom of the sea clean, and next Instant I, too, found myself lifted and dropped Into the net, together with hundreds like myself and a miscel laneous collection of small soles and Ither things. One of the men sorted over the catch and, having selected all the oysters and spat, "shaded" the rest back Into the sea through a porthole I, in company with enormous quan tities of other brood, was put Into a "wash" a measure holding five and a quarter gallons and rclaid. Here life was less eventful and food most plen tiful. To fatten well an oyster must have a certain amount of fresh water. In this snug retreat I passed from brood to half ware and from half ware to ware,, or full grown oyster. But I till went on growing and developing, until one duy the dredge swept me up again, and I was raised onee more Into the upper air and rapidly brought In. I wus then dropped Into a large bag and suspended In a tank of fresh sea water, which Is constantly renewed. There I await my final fate, which -will, I fear, be a fishmonger's counter. -New Xork Newa. THE GERM THEORY. Dm Foe Clara a flint af It la the Rarlr Elsrhteenth Centurjr. De FocVJonrunl of the Plague Year," published In 1722, contains two pas sages which, gniM toward bacteriology. Do Foe hltiMcIf pretends to disbelieve the theories. Hut his way Is to seem to doubt what be Is really eager to ad vance. Having shown that contagion was al most certain In tho case of people liv ing In the same house, but often avoid able by segregation and precaution against physical contact, Do Foe says: "This put It out of question to me that the calamity was spread by Infec tion that Is to say, by some certain steams or fumes, which the physicians call etlluvln, which eflluvla affected the sound who came within certain dis tances of tho sick. Others talk of In fection being carried on by the air only by carrying with It vast numbers of Insects nnd Invisible creatures, who en ter Into the body with the breath or even at the pores with the air and there generate or emit most acute poi sons or poisonous ova or eggs, which mingle themselves with the blood and so Infect the body." In another place Is this passage: "I have beard it was the opinion of others that It (the disease) might be distinguished by the party's breathing upon a piece of glass, where, the breath condensing, there might living crea tures be seen by a microscope of strange, monstrous and frightful shapes, such as dragons, snakes, ser Mnts and devils, horrible to behold. But this I very much question the truth of, and we had no microscopes at the time, as I remember, to make the experiments with." John Stuart Mill. Describing bis ImpresslouB of John Htuart Mill. Sir Leslie Stephen said: "I heard him speak in tho house of com mons. Instead of an Impassive philoso pher I saw n slight frail flguro trem bling with nervous Irritability. He poured out a series of perfectly formed sentences with an extraordinary rapid ity suggestive of learning by heart and when he lost the thread of his discourse closed bis eyes for two or three min utes till after regaining bis composure ho could again tuko up his parable. Al though bis oratory was defective, he was clearly speaking with Intense feel ing and was exceedingly sensitive to the reception by bis audience. Some of his doctrines were specially irritating to the rows of stolid country gentlemen, who began by listening curiously to so strange an animal as a philosopher and discovered before long that tho ani mal's hide could be pierced by scornful laughter. To Mill they represented crass stupidity, and he became unable cither to conceal his contempt or keep bis temper." The Songs That Reach tha Heart. At a time when the fashionable opera was In highest voguo Jenny Llnd came to America nnd achieved her greatest triumph by singing such simple airs as "Comln' Through tho Bye." They touched n popular chord, and It vibrat ed throughout continents. It Is the touch of nature that makes the wholo world kin. And Just as tho simple songs of Burns gave pleasure without militating against the culture of a taslo for tho higher creations In vocal music, so tho enjoyment of the slmplo melodies which we know as ragtime arc harmless and without danger of taking tho place of tho more elevated stylo of music. We cannot play trag edy all the time, but must have the melodruma and tho farce as the lighter features of tho stngo. And so in mu sic, lltcrataro and art the philosophy applies with the same force. Louisville Courier-Journal. Assayed. Sho had a silvery laugh and golden hair, llo bud plenty of brass. Ho knew sho was engaged to another man. but believed be could copper the other fellow's bets. But one day be met her on tho golf links. Her arms were bronzed and her teeth gleamed as pearls when sho smiled at biui. "Your lips," be said, "are like rubies and your eyes aro like great dia monds." "And your nerve," sho tittered, "Is llko steel, but you haven't got enough tin." It was then that the iron entered his soul. "Alas," he sighed, "she can never be mine!" Judge. flatting; a Coaslp, Miss Kidder They've only been mar ried six months, but whenever her hus band goes away on a business trip she's delighted and prepares to have a good time. Miss Meonley Aha! Do you know, I suspected something like that I al ways said Miss Kidder Yes. You see, be takes her with him. Philadelphia Ledger. Rearardleaa of Expense. "There Is a firm which doesn't spare any expense In conducting Its busi ness," remarked Straightman. "I should sny tbey don't" replied Neverpeigb. "They have bad a $3 a day man after me for a week to collect bill I owe them for $2," Cincinnati Times-Star. Hardships of BesTtrlnar. Lady Begging must bo hard. Tramp-It Is, lady. This Is the sixth time I have had to eat soup today. Fllegoudo Blatter. Lota of Ileroea. Billlcus Have you noticed that most heroes are married men? Cynlcus Sir, every married man la a hero. New Yorker. Yon may not be able to remove a wrinkle, but you may remove a frown and so change your wrinkles into rivu lets of laughter. Schoolmaster. ; ' Walt Whltmaa as a Journalist. Walt Whitman was not much of Journalist. Ho had too much repose. His employers called It laziness. He was concerned with permanences. The nearer to natwre, the more repose. Trees and hills do not dance except for urging. Whitman, olcincntnl, strong, placid, bovine, did not urge them. In tho Brooklyn Eagle oltlee Whit man Is a clearer memory than In tbe ofllee of Its contemporary. Yet It Is oddly hard to secure facts. There Is general and Joking reference to his serenity ns idleness. He was not typical newspaper man, for lie was not to bo pressed or hurried, and In our day of precision and speed he would have been Impossible. He never felt that stress from which the veriest bo hemlnn suffers. He did not want mon ey enough to work hard for it. One of the cnterlo of writers and actors which used to squander Its much wit and lit tle wealth at I'fafTs tells me that of the whole party Whitman was the only one who was never tipsy and never "broke." 1V always had a market somewhere for fugitive writings. Edi tors were friendly to 111 m. He drank his beer with the rest, but Its effect was to make him thoughtful, even sad, while the others were merry. Accord ing to that narrator, ho was an easy borrower, though It does not appear that be nuked for large amounts or made needless delays in tils repay ments. Charles M. Skinner In Atlan tic. How He Won Her. "Then you will bo a sister to met" "That Is all I can be." Ho paused and looked at her thought fully. "I nlready have seven sisters," he sold, "and I am not quite sure I can make room for you. They are very kind to mo. and on several occasions my socks bavo been darned a half doz en times In the same spot. Tliey are so thoughtful too. Each of them has pick ed out a wife for uie; but. strange to say, not one of them mentioned you. Of course yon won't feel hurt If I add that there Is a general and deep rooted Im pression among tliein tluit you ore not half good enough for me. Sisters are like thot sometimes, you know." The girl flushed hotly. "Not good enough 1" she cried. "I'll show them. Consider my refusal with drawn." And so hhe married the foxy fellow out of spite and made him very happy. Cleveland Plain Dealer. His F.stlmate of Krnnli'. Illinois Taylor, in bis argument be fore the Alaskan boundary commis sion, told a story of Edward A. Free man, the English historian, whom he knew well. On ono occasion, when dining with him ut n hotel in St. Louis. Mr. Taylor innocently asked hliu. "Mr. Freeman, what is your estimate of Fronde ns a historian-" Said Mr. Tay lor: "He looked at mo In n strange kind of way, and then he replied: 'I will tell you what I think about Fronde. If ever you rend anything be writes read It with. care. Bead it over and over again and fix it in your mind so that you will never forget it, for then you will know one thing for certain, and that is that by no possibility did it ever happen in that way." " The Hed Lobster. The iiucHtlou Is often asked, says the Lancet, without u satisfactory answer being supplied. Why do lobsters and certain Bluiinps and prawns turn red on boiling? One reason liiuy be that tho bluck pigment of tho lobster Is an Iron compound In the lower state of oxidation, which boiling oxidizes to the higher state. Bed human hair Is said to owe Its brilliance to Iron exist ing In the higher oxidized state, and by menus of reducing agents, such as pyrogalllc acid or uutgall. the color may be modified. In short, oxygen Is a grcut painter nnd probably accounts for tbe beautiful autumnal tints of plant life. . Wllllnar to Help lllm. Clerk I urn to be married shortly. Couldn't you manage to Increase my salary a little? Employer Couldn't, really. 'But I'll tell you what I'll do for you. my boy. I'll shorten your hours during tbe first three months, so that you can spend your evenings ut home, and after that I'll lengthen them again so that you will have an excuse tp get away. Papa's lleathea. Mamma Ueorgie. where Is the 5 cents I gave you to put In the contribu tion box for the heathen? Ueorgie I'm saving it for Aunt Het ty when she conies. "Why?" Oeorgle 'Cause 1 heard papa say, "Is the old heathen coming here again r' Circus Duslaesa. Maimnu-Oh, see, Willie! Your little brother can stand ull alone. Aren't you glad? Willie (aged six) Sure. Now I can get him to hold an apple on his bead while I shoot it off with my bow and arrow, can't 1? Immunity. "You want to marry my daughter, do you? Well, I'm free to sny you're the most impudent upstart thst ever" "Yes, you're free to say It because you're ber dad. If you wusu't I'd knock you old head off'n you!" Chica go Tribune, ta the Honeymoon. Adoring Bride Juek darling. Is this Wednesday or Thursday T Doting U room-1 think It's Friday, dearest. "Of this wcekr-Llfe. Base envy withers at another's Joy and hates the excellence it cannot reach. Thomson. CAN YOU WHI8TLEf If Toa t'aa To Read Haver laflTer from Dyspepsia. When the throes of indigestion and the qualms of dyspepsia are making your life miserable Just purse the lips aud whistle a brisk, merry tune not a muftlcd, doleful, half hearted whistle, but a whistle so deep and voluminous that tlie whole house will be Oiled with the sound. Don't be afraid somebody will hear you. Lot them hear you. It will do tlieiu good. It will enliven and cheer them while it cures you. Indigestion and dyspepsia always make one feel gloomy and depressed and, morbid and blue. Everything seems to go wrong, and doubtless you won't feel one bit like whistling. But no matter; whlstlo anyhow. If possible go out In the fresh air and do your whistling. If you ran't go outdoors Just open tho window wide and whistle with all your might Any old tunc will do, so you put life and vigor Into It Whistle, whistle, whistle! Keep It going. Don't get tired. Oo on with nil your might. Harder, harder!, Tho first thing you know the stom ach will have righted Itself, tbe liver will be working good and strong, the blood will be bounding through your veins, your brain will be clear and vig orous, and you will feel twenty years younger. Medical Talk. raise Hair. Wearing false hair Is a very wide spread custom. In the language of the tradesman, hair grown on the heads of northern nations Is the most vnlunble both because of Its superior fineness nnd gloss and Its color. Germany nnd Sweden provide the most vnlunble hair, especially If It be golden blond, which Is of the finest texture nnd of a color Impossible to obtain by artificial dyes. Italy umt other southern nntlons pro duco only coarser nnd less costly vnrl etles. Xiost precious of all. however. Is hair of a true silver gray color, which In sufllclently long plults Is al most Impossible to procure, chiefly from the fnct that Its very rarity causes those womeu lucky enough to possess it to refuse to part with It The most constant supply of human hair for tlie world's market, however, comes from the peasant girls In countries such as Hussln nnd (iullcln. whero Immediately after marriage n hendddesa Is assumed which makes Uie lack of Its natural covering unnotlceablo. In Bohemia. Moravia and Gsllcla there are regular hair markets to which tbe women take their bnlr for sale. Wonderful Hats. Abraham Lincoln was a man whose keen wit aud pleasing humor extricat ed him from many an embarrassing situation. On ono occasion be was pre sented with two fine bats, each by a different lmtmaker, neither knowing that the other had made such a contri bution. In the courso of events they called upon the president, and It so happened that both called at the same time. When both found themselves In the presence of the executive they asked how he had liked the hats they had sent him, and, taking advantage of the opportunity of securing a statement of superiority of ono or the other make, the president was asked to state his preference. To many men such a question would be very embarrassing, but to Lincoln not at all. He took the hats, one In each hand, and then replied gravely, but with n mischievous twinkle In his keen eyes: 'Gentlemen, your bats do mutually surpass each other!" The flank of England's Museum. The Bank of England has a curious museum. In which the princlpnl exhib its are Its own notes. Among them Is a note for a penny, which was Issued by mistake and bought back by tbe bank for 23. An other Is a noto for 1.000.000. A third is a bank note which was found luBldo a codfish caught off the Newfoundland banks, and a fourth Is a note which was In circulation for over a century and a half before It was presented for puyment . There are many forged notes In the museum, their value aggregating many millions of dollars, and there are also some notes which were recovered by divers from the sunken wreck of the British war ship fcurydlce. A Similarity. "It was one of the most pathetic ploys I ever saw." said young Mrs. Tor kins. - "I don't see why you go to the mati nee If It makes you cry." "Just because I feel bad Is no sign I bnveift hud a good time, Charley, dear. You know how much you enjoy going to the races and coming back wltb the blues.'.' Washington Star. Posted. "Now," suid tbe lecturer, "suppose you had been called to see a patient wltb hysterics some one, for Instance, who had started laughing and found It impossible to stop what Is tbe first thing you would do?" "Amputate his funny bone," prompt ly replied tbe new student Terrible Revenare. Husband You don't appear to like Mrs. Sweetie. Wife Tho horrid thing! I bate berl Next tlnil we meet I'll kiss ber only once, and I shan't ask after her baby. Stray Stories. The Finish. Flanagan Phwot did yes do whin McQarry hit yes wld the pick? Finnegnn Ol done McQarry. Ex change, i WM MM It is love of vlrtuo, not fear of lav, that makes civilisation. Aa Vaeapeeted Result "Up In a little mining town in Penn sylvania," said a Keystone sUte con gressmau, "there was a political mass meeting at which the principal speak ers were a Democrat named Kennedy and a Bcpuhllrnn spellbinder named Plummer. It was arranged that Ken nedy should sieak llrst 'At one point lu my speech.' Kennedy ssld to Plum mer, '1 am going to sny that before the war I was a Whig, but then I became a Democrat. I want you to ask me why I did so. It will give me a fresh start, and then I can talk for an hour,' "At tho proper moment Kennedy mndo his statement, and Plummer, who hnd gone down In the crowd, In terrupted blin. 'I want to know,' he said In a loud voice, 'why yo'i became Democrat? "At that moment u muscular miner bit him a tremendous blow with his fist. 'I'll show yon,' he said, 'that you can't break up a Democratic speaker here.' "When the Republican orator came to his senses, the meeting hod ad journed." A Woman's Kiss. Tlie story of Ingeborg Vlndlng and Pou! Vendelbo Lovenorn Is well known In Denmurk. Poul Vendelbo. a poor student, went one day on the ramparts around Copenhagen and walked with two rich noblemen who. like himself, had inutrlculatcd at the university. They happened to notice a' singularly beautiful woman sitting nt the win dow of one of tho adjacent houses. One of the noblemen then said half mockingly to Vendelbo. "Now, If you could get a kiss from that lady, Poul, we would defray the expenses of that tour ubroad which you are so anxious to make." Vendelbo took him at his word, went up to tho beautiful lady and told ber how bis whole future depended possi bly on ber. She then drew htm toward the window nnd In the view of the no blemen gave him tho kiss he craved. He then went abroad nnd. returning at last ns Adjutant General Lovenorn, paid tbe fair lady a visit She was Ingeborg Vlndlng, and she had made a clever man's fortune by a kiss. Orlu-la of Kilts. It will doubtless surprise msny Scotchmen to learn that the kilt ns at present worn Is only n modern fnncy costume nnd Is not of Scottish origin at all. The honor of Its Invention is due to two Englishmen an army tailor who accompanied General Wade's forces to Scotland In 1710 and Thomns Itawlln son, overseer of some Iron works In Glengarry's country. For more than a century previously. Indeed, the tar tan plaid had been the common garb of the highbinders, but It was all In one piece, wouud in folds uround tbe body, leaving tbe knees bare. Prior to the adoption of the tartan, which probably took place about the close of the fifteenth century, tlie long, loose saffrou colored skirt, the real "garb of old Gaul," was the highland dress. London Mall. William Blank's Joke. On one occasion wbeu William Black, the novelist, and his wife were to sup wltb Mary Andersou In ber room at the Lyceum he got access beforehand to the supper room, famous as tbe meeting place of the old Beefsteak club, and pasted over tbe labels of the champagne bottles a paper bearing In large letters tbe one word "Poison!" It happened ou this occasion that, un known to Black, Mary Anderson was entertaining a number of guests with whom she was but slightly acquainted, so that tbe Joke turned out to be some what embarrassing. It must have giv en tbe strangers, who knew Black only by repute, something of a shock to dis cover how very boyish be was under his cold outward domeanor. His Little BUI. "The senator from New Jersey re minds me of one of those ferocious Newark mosquitoes." I beard ber re mark to a gentleman by ber side wltb eyeglasses and thin hair In one of the senate galleries. "How so?" queried tbe man, putting his ear closer to ber and looking as If he expected something real brilliant "Because be seems to be forever pushing bis little bill." Yonkers States man. Revenare. nis Father If you marry old Stubbs' daughter, you sha'u't have a shilling of my mouey! The Son But, father, If I don't mar ry her I can't get a shilling of old Btubbs' money. His Father (with a grudge to satisfy) My own boy! Marry ber nnd reuder that old skinflint penniless'" London Standard. Two Backs. "That duck was fine," said the en thusiastic patron. "I can't imagine anything more acceptable than nice little canvasback." "Unless," said tbe proprietor of tho restaurant, "it's a nice big greenback." Philadelphia Record. are to Be Prejudiced. Friend Don't look so blue. You have a good case. Jlmsou No use. I'll lose. 1 know I'll lose. Every man on that Jury either rented or bought a bouse of me wheu I was In tbe real estate business. New York Weekly. Heredity. "Do you believe In heredity?" "Certainly. I kuow a barber who has three little shavers." New York Times. .Tbe biggest Ivory market in tbe world Is at the London docks, where the quarterly sales of ivory a vera if 1500,000, COSTLY PRICE FOR A BATH. It Was So Meek a Poaad, and tha Woman Waa -Heavy. "When 1 was connected wltb the hotel at Lake Mlnnetonka several years ago," remarked a hotel man, "we bad as a regular summer guest a woman from tlie south who was remarkably stout, weighing Something over 200 pounds. One day she called a bell boy and Inquired: " 'Whut do they charge for a batbf M'I don't know,' said tbe boy, "but I'll And out' "After being gone a short time tha boy returned and said: " 'Seven cents a pound " 'Whntr "'Seven cents a pound.' said tbe boy a second time, while tbe woman's face became scarlet as she mndo her way to the clerk's desk. "'I want my bill,' she exclaimed. 'I have been grossly insulted and shall leove your bouse.' "She stated ber grievance, the boy was sent for and explained: " 'She asked me what they charged for bass. I told ber I didn't know, but would find out I asked the stew ard and he said 7 cents a pound.' "As tbe ludicrous blunder of the boy dawned upon tbem both the clerk and the guest made the hotel office resound wltb their laughter." Milwaukee Sentinel. Mr. Dolan'a Carriage. Mr. Dolon. through the agency of butter and eggs, bad reached that stage of prosperity where be was able to set up an establishment with a horse and carriage, and nobody begrudged blm his success. "But what's the reason your wife drives round In a carriage with tbe let ter C on It?" Inquired one of Mr. Do Inn's friends. "You've not changed your name. Terry?" "Naw, man." said Mr. Dolan gsyly; "me name has stood me fifty years, an' It 'II lust out me tot me. But tbe cor rlnge wan a grent bar-rgaln at slcotid hanil, man, and the 'C was on It 'Twud cost n bit to change It to a 'D.' nnd I snys to Mary Ann. 'D is a kolnd of a broad lukln' lettber. wholle C Is more dilicate and ornamlntnl.' I snys. 'And. besoldo that It's the very next to D In the alphabet, and. more tbnn all,' I says, 'It stands for con tinted, and that's what Ivery Dolsn Unit roldes In the carriage will be, so let It stund,' nnd Mury Ann agreed wld me." Youth's Companion. flura-larloua Bees. To the person who knows nothing about bees they represent the supreme type of industry. But even tbe bee com niunltles are disturbed by those of their own kind who break through and steal. Bobber bees are always a source of anxiety to beekeepers, says the Lon don Chronicle, and In the autumn the marauders seem particularly active. Having gathered no honey, or, at any rate, an Insullicicnt supply for them selves, they will descend upon a hive, kill Its Industrious occupants und car ry off tlie golden treasure In an aston ishingly short space of time. We know of one Instniice In which the attack wus developed nnd Jhe home bees killed lu a couple of hours. Sometimes hive will attuck neighboring hive. In such cases tlie old straw "skip" was better tbnn the niodeni arrangement, for a knife thrust through the top would break the comb and set tbe honey free, at which the thieves would Instantly return to seal up their own store. It is not primarily In their Industry thot bees are human. A Fanny Chase. Lord Orford. un eccentric English nobleman, once had a team of red deer stags that be frequently drove to a light coach. All went well until one day there happened to be a pack of staghounds on the road from Loudon to Brighton, along which Lord Orford's picturesque team waa merrily fleeting. There followed the strangest chase that ever mortal man witnessed. Tbe hounds bunted the team and its owner bard to Newmarket and with such a smash Into the Ram inn yard the whole lot went that there was no more coach left and little more of driver. Lord Orford took to horses after that Conquering a Crltla. William Simpson, a British artist who accompanied the army during tbe Crimean war, said that Lord Cardigan, the commander, examined bis early sketches of Balaklava with "a vacant stare," curtly remarking, "It la all wrong." Still Simpson persevered and was rewarded In tbe end "with the ex pression of Lord Cardigan's highest ad miration." "The real truth was." be adds In his simple way. "that In tbe last sketch I bad taken greater care tbnn In tbe first two to make hla lord ship conspicuous In tbe front of the brigade." The Debt Waa Forcottea. Trotter Why baven't you been in to aee me lately? Ballaw Well-er the truth la I waa afraid that you mlgbt regard my visit ns a 'reminder of tlie money you owe me. Trotter Why. my dear fellow. I bad forgotten all about It Sorry it troubled you. Too Qrabby, "Some of the young girls nowadays," said Miss Ann Teek. "are positively terrible. Tho Idea of a girl being en gaged to two young men at once! It's vbumoful!" "And," suggested Miss Pepprey, "It's aggravating, too. Isn't it?" Philadel phia Press. Her Bread. Walter Have you ever made bread before, Marie? ' Marie Ob, yes; I used to make It for my futber until bis doctor made ma atop. . Was- rtre Makes tie Slash, ' When one stands before a hot lira, the face becomes red, as we all know. This result Is the effect of tbe action of radiated beat on the nerves con trolling the small blood vessels of the Bkln. These tiny vessels are normally In a state of moderate contraction. Under exposure to heat they relax and become distended with blood. The same process, under the mysterious connection of the vasomotor nerve sys tem wltb mental Impressions, produces j ordinary blushing. a regard to ex-j posure to direct heat the reddening of ' tho skin, togotber with tho uncomfort ably warm feeling accompanying It, I may be looked upon ns one of the use ful little "danger signals" with which we are surrounded. Persons who from any cause have lost their susceptibility, as Is the case In some forms of paralysis, may ex pose a limb to bent until serious In Jury results. The reason that the face chiefly flushes Is that In the ordinary position near a Are, It Is most directly exposed to the rays of heat while most of the body Is shielded by cloth ing; that tbe nerves of the face are' particularly sensitive In this respect and that the skin there Is more abun dantly furnished with blood vessels. Haare and the Barber. When Victor Hugo lived In Paris, In the place Royale, be used to be shaved by a barber named Brassier. A friend of the poet asked the barber one day If be was busy. "I hardly know which way to turn." was tbe reply. "We have to dress the hair of thirty ladles for soirees and balls." And M. Brassier showed the list to his friend. A few days after tbe friend returned and In quired about the thirty ladles. "Ah, monsieur," said the barber sadly, "I was not able to attend half the num ber, and 1 have lost many good cus tomers through M. Victor Hugo." It appears that tbe poet when about to be shaved was suddenly luspired and. aelzed the first piece of paper he could; And to write a poem. Hugo bnstllyj left the shop with his unfinished verses. ! on the back of which were tbe names! and addresses H the thirty ladles,; many of whom waited In vain for their; coiffeur. ' i Bill Rlee aad a Pla. ; Billy Rice, negro minstrel, used to: tell the story of a man who picked up! a pin as be was leaving tho office of a; great merchant after an unsuccessful j quest for work. i Tbe merchant seeing tbe man's ac-j tlon from tbe window, called him back; and gave him employment, which kind-; ness be repaid by becoming owner of; the entire business In an Incredibly! short time. i Billy used to end his story by say-; lng that be tried that scheme once; when he was looking for work. dropping a pin carefully on the floor as he en-! tered. He stated his wants to tbe pro prietor, who not only had no employ ment to offer blm, but remarked to bis partner us Rice picked up the pin: "Say. If that fellow's so small as to steal a pin off the floor, how much do you think he'd leave iu my till?" Soma Ifaatlmal Facts. A knot Is 0.080 foot long. The dis tance from New York to Liverpool is 3,00-1 nautical miles by the northern track and 3,130 by tbe southern track. The former course is taken by vessels bound for New York, the latter by ves sels bound for Liverpool. From Liver pool to New York the distances are respectively 3,030 and 3,100 miles. In estimating records the points tak en on either side are Sandy Hook and Dnunt'a rock, Queenstown harbor. The first light sighted on the British const Is the Bull, Cow and Calf, Ireland, and on the American coast either Nantuck et or Fire Island. Sweetheartlae;" la Chareh. Speaking of tbe custom which was once widely spread of making men sit In a different part of the church from tbe women, an English minister was told the following anecdote by a Gloucestershire rector: "I remember when I was a boy a young couple com ing into the church here on a Sunday afternoon and seating themselves to gether on the women's side. Tbe man was soon turned out of his seat by tbe verger, with the remark, uttered in an audible voice, 'We don't have no sweet hearting here.' "London Tit-Bits. Hat That Klad. The impecunious artist was speaking of a near model be had secured for a great work be was preparing. "Does she lend herself to the sub ject?" Inquired a dilettante wbo loved art for art's sake. "I should say not" replied tbe artist who bud got bis start as a sign painter. "She charges $2 an hour." New York Herald. All Rla-ht Otherwise. Lawyer (drawing up marriage settle ment between American heiress and Impoverished foreign nobleman) j There, I think we have it right now to! a dot j Count Boylon de Bakkovlsnek (pros-; pectlve bridegroom) Sure, I prefalr se! Inkllah word "dowry." Chicago Trlb-! i Flo-area Doa't Lie. i Brown You only fifty! That's a! good onel j White My daughter says she Is only: twenty-six, and she was born two; years after I was married, and I was! married at twenty-two. Figure It out for yourself.-tBoston Transcript Brloka aad Mortar. Two Irishmen were arguing wbo was the cleverer. "Well" said Pat. "I'll bet you cau't tell me what keeps bricks together." "Sbure." said Mike. "It's mortur." "No," said Pat; "you are wrougs thst keeps them apart"