TPPRECIATED." K conquest OF THE NORTHWEST, JOHN BULLY MEANNESS TOWARD A | _ FOREMOST INVENTOR. | AT Tidhgs Beis Tried Bard to Cres . the Discoverer of the “Bessemer Proo- we ¥ | Xavention—Bevsemer’s Butety Stamp. The invenice of the oelelhrated * Bes. pemar process’! is the most modest of men, shanniny rather than oomrting ob- servation A few years sine ho was | pometimes to Ye seen taking = '“ronsti- 1 | there were no white pen weit ese”--The Creat Change Wronght by the | Allechany monnfuins, apd here i i Lt wv tational” in the néighborbood of his un- | Aa £3 pretentions alo Emprland, but th fashioned frook coat and voluminous, many folded choker neckeloth, §8 now rarely seen even by his immedistapeigh- - burs, : The British publi 0 ernnumt end Bi their very bess ut one time to crash one of the most useful men ever born in| BE: alo and fu! ed ignaminjously. Bhet. fied laughs edd aid him, and Woolw ich gave fim 10 ein © id shoulder, bo feld od Wa: tw ih weomld indeed 0 4 EH err tLEs i a Fire ia t Shed tine were it pot oy Sir Beary year's yr ghgetion might be reps C181 fines te he lit ui thadrsl, and us thie through us a: dinery gasometer—about 100 fest Heury Bestcruer, son of the Anthony Bessaner, fomdshire in the year i810 se 18 were devoted to art, «0d we find that be was an exhibitor at the Royal academy at the age of 20. At this early age he iad discovered a means by which fmmprossions of the designs on coins, medals end ¢ther reliefs could be repro- Auced in ary numbers on cardboard Some of his work in this line is still ex- tant, nnd when specimens come into the raarket they bring high prices. : This lod him indirectly to a more i ron iw A Paul’ 8 C3 k ? C3 . i 05 a 3 a WER MY 1is x important invention. HeWiscovered that | the government of the time was robbed to the tune «f £100,000 per annom by unscropalons persons, who were in the habit of reracring the embossed duty stamps on legal and other documents and using the same again. Young Bes- semor invented tho nsiful little contriv- ance by which the stamp is embossed on the paper or parchment of the document ftsc il, and = Lsitted it to the'then chief of tle n devartinent at Somerset Ho u Le 4 FRU of thi # svstenn af a ¢l socom uftersynra tl thie their willingmons pretty int! fy entio pl i Heil young lady Fy 3 1 i vl 4] 1 L 7 os § Ler dret co: ’ it sh i that she Was eril fil Ed to ret tie wife of zn inventor. Blo bald: SER, “1a ti {on saw thea ade ICR, and exons it. A ith this ivy errs! team anes! x if i ax 1. WON yr ¥ os, Ie uridurstand this, Bt surely, all stamps bod a dato pa re thet, they call not at a foture a used again witht detection.’ This Froved a very valuable sugges tion, for Boawnner soon hit upon the tin of a steel din vith a space for a movable date, and in that form his invention was adopted by the anthorities. Will it be aredited thal. he never received a solitary fafething fren the government for bis servioes or tue use of his invention? Buch is nevertheless the fact, and when be hinted mildly at legal remedies lie was told by the solicitor to the stamp department that he was entitled to no compensatica, inasmuch as he had pre- sented his favention to the government gratis! This was at a time, too, when fe was by no means well off, when in- Ae hg lashed the nocessary money to sat op howwlieeping with the clever your indy whose brilliant suggestion had resilted. in a perfect stamping ma gaine! He received many gencr ous prov- | -1s08 from vuricus ministers. of coarse but one government went id Pod after apothor, and te . « Lo has never boen emupensal ot in a; nape or ‘ori ) A mae of oa .thnow, Sir Heary wer can 1iford to regard the trou = AK 4 of his lifewith com- pLritive , thoggh he has gion had Tooth ke reasom to cherish a dislike for all British governments ‘snd politicians, Bat Lis disappointment in this instaacs taught him a very salu. tary lesson. When he ‘made the great discovery of kis life—that by which it is possible to convert pig iron into steel by u simple and sex] ive process— he kept his diicovery A secret. To somé extent it 180 secret Bq this day. The importance of the discovery can hardly be ve westimated. - Yefore thie Bessemer process camo into use steel sould not be bought under £30 a ton, and its price prohibited its ase in numberless departments of indus- wy where it is now considered essential. Al that ime, too, only 51,000 toms of cast steel were produced in Sheffield in a year. [Ir 1892, 83,646 tons of steel were mantfactored in the world every day aceording to the Bessemer process, the selling price per ton averaging £8 perhaps It is chiefly due to Sir Henry Flessemer tha); one is almost as safe on a piodern ocean steamship as on laud, and that the modern structure of steel is nearly as imperishable as the Pyrariids Such a discovery, it might be stp- posed, would be hailed with enthusiasm by those interested in the iron trade of Great Brithir. ' Not a bit of it. Bes. swiner met with every possible discour- agement. The steel manufacturers of fbeeld were dead againet him from ibe first, anil the government ignored os 5. + wen Ed ” * his nf that La oe i the British gov- | sh rizuafacturers aid | woop ; Yin wow |. Reppert rn oa oer } te Bis Bade £04 plier | if] at Denmark Hill, in | a venerable gentlemen | with the lezciolent face, in the old eds ¥ $ { ba crippled : i to way, pat wi It Was Acquired From the Tirtttsh by | Foves of Arms, In 1776, ‘when independencn was de- elared, the United Btates included cniy | the 13 original states on the seabourd With the exception of a few hutites, A the wis pot even an Anwricsh haptir im ib great eonntry cur of which we ba gince mad the states of lllinois, Ind ana, Ohio chim pnd Wises 2) | this regi idl F.4 wkd for mad a parte x8 a wi va praizios, tpemirg v0 fied by ¥miny warlike Flore anil there ¢ Jittle towns veg) int | the re wt iz | enn %, the ‘and Ka he kia, wily wii lees im) ¥oatmsh, £3. the Ere rifting off 1 prs: A ular sobdirs or T CT eo riiemns, in thi I yo 7 v | None of tia Ar pe oy Quien lg £ 5 x proshery torritery TL ¢ ¥3 Not] tin acl Leis § | Gown to report | pupprsed to ba P the vessel Want « Linto | the body | The water wag | with ! shock. | Medd of the tales vou hear abomt groups | which is a: | of Gend poopie sittin roand quite natural | geojrraphics ARE SAD FACED MEN. THIZ iS WHAT ONE OF THE car SAYS OF DEEP SEA DIVERS. -— rte A Life That Isn't Exactly dolly A Veto ersn Tells of Experiences He and Other Divers Have Fiad — A Clos Shave Fairy. tand on the Ocean's Bottom, ge | Fupprse yom BOILER oe stn ights in wrecks,” a veteran Geep sea d “Yer, but Rit us 1% orm A been im the When 1 frst started ai 8 TTAOR Yr; Ti i til KE aier tii ve bat when { weut : 5 23 frat gente] at thy re iosr and TrEMgn Ll a oA alrmt four tinges | rahin the of a man the vie mati] be Joni his natural size. His band was vpon the ! shomlder of Now 1 dm’t mind ‘em st nll | a cabin sre les A body will rise sft. being in the water a com's! wd be found fosding Wheg they have ¥ FAIR der a table, they ®anctimes | away, becansa tl i tabla, tretty nast where they are until their bed; seey mre held 6 which iv nsasily screwed to vir “ An English diver I knew omer v experience with sharks 3 i | this qmestion, : re drowned whey | ing I saw was Call Ba SEY pL Bin one ks 70 rg Pie Ben ay mts tomy Bev | Why do the binds iit soathward each | totumn and return again with every | | spring? Fo one knows, but science, in | the person of Professor Wing, the er went Austrian ornithologist, bas just dis- | {dl that tive ternal fippunt answer to | “Borgase they like to wa far ont of the way, sfler i. a ! travel," is Int a bootie thay Pre # Tow / Arar Tif BETEP LAY fren stin of # risen hig Ther folbrw tha ine spomthward, sed sre rrost inerediile rapidity deni’ Jratiins res E1 rECDOCtS ETT g ¥ T presen from nor Lom J. ne od or Egyia, whick is i wigter home of many, and theses (dor %, we, or pes ’ £ ax deny | fon by thes | Loe i i "| was diving in a wreck which had been | | lomded with live cgitie When she had trav ed. it it was ppenix POR nd, 0 uti ig nid red ing war wi the Ind other scttler. Bat all the time his mind waa bent | on vaster scheipes than were dreamed of by the men arpond him. He had his spies oat in the Northwestern territory ind became convinced that with a small furee of resolute bavk- woodsmen }oooild conquer it for the | United States. When ho went back to Virginia, Governor Patrick Henry en- tered heartily into Clark's schemes nnd gave him authority to fit ont force for his purpose. —Thaodore Roosevelt in Bt Nicholas. rly hiro WOMEN IN FRANCE. They Are Not Only the Etronger het the Better Half In That Cozatry. Women are the strange: as well as the better hall of France. They do every- i stan or in the French custom hoase iz 8 wo- man. Ehe is in the Havre office, snd she bas a nosd that can detect dntiable goods without opening a Jock. Bhe is nstorslly amiable Gnd slow to anger, bot wou to the foreigner or countryman woo juG- vokes her ire. There is no sadiler gpectoelo in the re- public of France than the women shoe polishers, , who dows pador the sheds of the rum k| ttl i £YR ghint nr ult £ ET the Tle 7 i Cnav, of de besten woiting £ or tnpde. r fs ask boon a; unworn all i7 Wor K . At Liders, the Dlackest in France, tho womsn wit outside of the grimy Litle machine shops mating scis- sor a and poiishing knife and avis sor handles. Tha stream that turns the 16,000 lifitle mill wheels is blacker than the Clhicigo river, aud ns the furnaces never Lain withodit beleaing the toilers and their devoted lifelong apurentics are somdtimes Malay snd sometines Mongclinu, bot seldom Cancasizn oolor. Not lopz ago a college woman went down to Thiers to teach school for the winter. The promise of 80 pupils wus a temptation, Lut ou reaching the eclowy of woot begrimed and smoky sta‘ned smithies sho found thst the position paid £5 1 month. and ‘toe teacher "was expected to farmivh the fal for the win- ter. —Phi adel pis a Time 8 i en town IP Wipe Lin an i cn brn Left 20 Welch Children ‘He Will ‘Mnithfully Protect Them, The «hole family of the mahout be. coms, as it were, parasites to the ele- plant, by whom they earn their living. 1 have scion a baby place} by its mother systematically under the elephant 's cam and within reach of iis trunk, whils the mother weut to fetch water ar to get wood or aerial to cok the family dinner. No jackal or wolf would Ie who was thus confided to the care of un a life in the jungle know how vers pos- sible it is for a jackal or wolf to carry off a bally when lying in a hut when the mother’s back is turned. The children thus brought up iv the ‘familiar with him and take all kinds of liberties with him, which the elephant seems to endure on the principle that it does not hurt him, while it amuses the child. Yon see a little nuked black child about 2 feet high standing on the ele- phant’s hare Lack aud taking it down to the water to bathe, shouting all the time abusive larruag On arviviig an the water the elephant, ostensibly i \ commanr, a, 1 lis down and enjoys him- self, just leasing apart of his body, like a small island, ebove the water, on which the small child stands and yells and yells all the more if he bas several companions of his own age, also in in the water around him. If the child slips off his island, the elephant’s trunk promptly replaces him in safety. The little ureliins as they grow up become first mates to mahouts and eventually arrive at the d dignity «f beipre mahouts r—— © In 1870 candles wern first made from hira. —Boston ‘Commercial Bulletin ozokerit. thing but build houses. Tho best inspoct- | cept 2 cent for thelr | ¢... 3 FT 0 likely to pick up and carry off a leby | elephart, but most people who have lived | been down i bettom fu TR ImOn tr 80, of the pattie light sad fosted up ‘agaivet the hated. wars As soem a8 he started the after batch, began #0 hat ort a up to the surface of the weiter. The | ] cay was infested with dark they som begun to gather roond ¢ § hasway; grabbing the cattis as th came out and following them pp to 1 sorfoce, fighting amvng thansels Ramo of the eattle hind becom tied, they floated out as far as thekr r ut the tho hexiics baser1es the cart Jen #® ‘woanld allow. The sharks gathered ron thom and began to tear them to pi Pretty soom they began to fight. and px Marsh—-that was his namo--was to go up for fear he might be attiarke and afraid to stzy down becsase on snap of a shark's mouth would bay | severed his air bose in a Vekie. ou | gave the signal to be lanled up i harry snd went biff among the schic | of sharks and throagh them. In going | f epenmibility of driving ber back, firing | f ; | rand, but the first motion I made the; through » shark snapped at him anc th i they have o. i "| Fired Ly thé Cad i itary acaden : of : Pant Cwas agipted tim replat for guard duty dnd were IARI ; » battery or Morris islind, when, on | ; Jan. 9, 1561. | tempted to oat ¥ the harbor with sap | merits for Fort Soxs- | | was toshot, end I probably wonid have | took off his right hand, so that he hes! to give up the bosiness ”’ “What's the narrowest ever aad?’ “Well, aboat the closest slave thine | remember was when I wis putt! copper (m a steamer’s bottom < was in dock. I took mane fn with me and did sare of the ball, after whi h some plates on the ¢ pel vas aboni the : I crawled ander oes gtk plates Aer rit: tog for some OSOn 4 a ¥ ig ? i wok i » go ¥o i geiting ghey | upiler the | : | keel companiinship of un elephant hecome | in the nist nubxeoming terms of native | ohedience to the. child's | charge ¢f their elephants, all wallowing | mghbt. ‘amine you just as a lot of humant ! wonld look at some strange anima. { And scprez ng ui; Freee BY ing onl, anil» til she wns alin | ag gotten all dont the tide, pulled the hose 1 found - is wonld Pees au ipch. fc i sun scared} no word {or bow 1 felt “If the bottom had been soft, it wos! not have mattered so munch, bot 3) 3 rock, znd the hose was gripped i ; vior. There was pothing to do but wall JZ she fell any lower, the air would | entirely shut off, and [ would have to dia. You can bet 1 shall forget those few minutes waiting to sce whether she roe My head fait as though ! and my nose and ears Preser:tly I felt the air ¢itn fresher, I took heart, » gan to rise with the t There wos plenty of my verve back before enough off the bottom for me under. 1 didn’t pet it back but just stood there trom could squeeze ander Ler | the signal to be han after that I was a Yicariug has never bow I ‘Sometimes, expaiially in ters, the bottom of the = 1 have seen a forest seaweed gently waving wild which looked {a‘ryiand light and the bright col about make it look all the fal A bit of peawend on Yand amount to much, but if > y lar {forest of it growing it} adv st! wxl3 ? i - » 5 Ph 3 Iwi v b na rn of tie nf J OT a “hve was TEL LE Tor al ry dai nl» wil KORE SUT ferent. mine a minnte 1 FOR AN PX 4 “If son stand still for fish will swim all arcund the slightest movement they whisk t tails and not a living thing 1s to be seen «Js takes the life out of a man sane 4 a been used to mark the days from the how, diving does, and I never knew diver who did much smiling. Thiy ar all rather grave, sober faced men He New York Tribune. Constituent Parts of a Cord of Wood. A cord of fatrly seasoned wood wei ob about 4,000 pounds If subjects! | heat of between 700 and 800 des resolves into three distinet Poy 0 | charcoal, pyroliguecas ‘sctd wd gu In order to properly bring th! 3 about it is necessary to pia “ in a kiln’ and apply the host for four or five days. A# thw vod time the residue will be 1,000 pon | charcoal, 2,000 pounds of [¥ro! acid and 1,000 pounds of abou eal gases. Tho aggregate weight oF those products is exactly equal to the orginal weight of the wood —St Louis Repub lic +H is ul at vy = “ { PH {an por i BG, he koe i ba did alxx i tii oT, “{ production ; of this hater i white bef } anges 1 fairy : finan a little boy, who was sitting | vations bev establish dd some facts hit) {om his knee. Tt was ray first experionon | : : ! orto unknown. The binebirds traoeree | dend hodies, and it gave meé al the 400 ne : stioad miles which rn Helgol nd ino si the rat of more ori wa [er ho aver 2. 7 tram, i Egypt from 8 i Joe's spend fastest ral birds, ; trans i Profes or the rover : over, bod a | ‘ide | etand the rig traveling v. the Soagth Caro Bis EY 3 by 1 fs CRT r dna hia PCE hE Pgs 2 pd W BE TR ba kding cali | was criginally on ued form ht thes C58 Lo which | strucand for an srsexal | tim and currienics: are Simiier 10 thie the Upilad Frat s ac i Alter the ordinante of seckssion 48 Were ordered U Eadie 3 20k § the Star of the West at- plies and ré-enl The Imp boys took the re- & $= A & shot acrass her bows to give warning. | The steamer immedistely ran up the ? | formidable locking that I conclnded tn United States fag and increased her, speed. The shots fell thick zod fast ni After a moment's hesitation, durisg wound ber, and when one strock ber in| the stern the commandoy thonght it pasient to retreat and tarned his vesse) | seaward The cadets of this institution | beleve that act entitles them to the | hostage of tbe south, and the prestige thos acqni rod; has made them the objects | of avy thronghont © that whole section | =A iestion Latter ia Chica Reered wom Tosi For or xe Trees (+. W Prosecat of Highland, who took tho wedal f for wat Yoox of packed or Sahy trope | then B Calif ruin Sate (5 has een experimenting wi sa his young ter makhanic of tl het 3 : more 5% vd ait + a fornia at Sar : abomt. inom Slings ¢ ns guano or shy other 1 Ukpowing that a ar wl ira in the soi] was essential to # Lemlthy gowtis of the tree snd the ‘of Yuit he put five pounds ground each trod, and as ighly eclored orang a pale colored ¢ uit. is insdjpificant.” A thousand | fer cETIaLn 3 a a result be has are he The cost { trees om tem mcrey will require 5,000, } —§10 for the ten a _ | this sppliéation of | to supersede all otler fertilizers, taut | give a good oulor to th pounds of filings, wyighy coets $4 per ton | bard Of conrse is not intended | imply to supplementthem in Gréer tfrait and epable | the grower to put an Stractive orange | on the market, and incientally to assist | him occasionally in wrming a gold) | medal The railroad shows at San Ber | i nardino can foroisk ome tm per day of this material, and other ®ops can als "assist in sapplying the de and —Fro- I ocst of | capitals resulls fing facts: At Vienna the po articles of food are lowest. I 1 hey ap ; 1 BY ULM 1c + Petersburg alse the duaoer. ¢ Cont of Living 1a 1 orope’s "gpitaie An investigation into U Living at inthe 3 OF Ryan Zrite YAU A Lr Bas iSK AL <9 i « FR 1, Fons Fg ¥ f ereet- At M4 LF rs a8 bremd, nea TF CXPEnEive. of brea PRA § + ck rer 4 ¥ » wk 43.08 tal, wie 1 Ph dal are Ve 3 Pr Wi B= | high that white bread is still consideed | {a luxury above the means of | ing classes I an inexpens i higher = 1 ribly i i H i 1 | the gr organs or by giving them too much w | do the food taken is prevented from | v% the wok ext to Viena, Brosseis's city. Paris is a Litt, in the scale, but London is “tor expessive —Weitmioster x Ive (2a zetia : he Pleiades Those timckeepers th Pleiades nave | mostremote periods Mr. T. W. Pewkes, | { describing the fire ceremonies of the Pu- | ebls Indians of Tusayan, says that, hav} ing been present cn two tach oeeAsIOnS In | 1592 and 1598, he found that the error | of time mude by the Indians as to the | 13th of November in tose WO years | . 1 was insig ganificant. It wus the calming. | tion of the Pleiades which told the In dians the proper time for the beginning of their rites. — New York Times Overeating: Overeating is generally echde med oa d that by stufing th oun properly no arishing him who takes it. It is possible, however, tht (me may suf- fer from too muck nutriment as well as from too little, even when it is properly assimilated. : i despw Wang re Lvered at Vieans he gare gore | | Ts nave evn: rode at Helgo- wh is the priticipal haking | a4] of +390 {58 Gone twas Jom £ i gre the AA Twith sproeo nd 1 The organize | i it. 0: iy won zt hesitate cased death, bat: i skins | care Bpon an immer he dig FUstivVe | [Anas | 6000 Fis AERMEN, ROADMAKERS AND FIERCE FIGHTERS | What Hauters Who Haw Bot the o vicshy Have to fay of Fis Alms Cousde’ They Dro Xet Pour Max and Will Fight While Mortally Wounded, rovently rateroed from The Almidam beowt bear srimmal, varying A trate ruho 4 rod 3 of ber fairest citisens—a belle of 1 Fine work ne it was, however, at ane tine thers was imminent danger of 8 "| beeing a decorative sigabosrd of » prominent eal livery stabla. Long wifcre the days of ihe iron hase a wandering artist strayed along wha i now the corner of Lake and Clark streets, and thers opened ss stodie Amcag the early patrons of his bensh wns a dsaeiing creators who yearned to i have hee lwenoty perpetusted npos can- 4 ad thw | i I Vomit trimtaries an faz Af op flue saline TA ron ia S12 Petroats Int y berries and Army ther th Tr the a eraall i» we rag Ere pion : ng #nd oeeasionally | chewing up & hantor, be is» grevtrond. Ata 3 dea Te of Ee SPF plating a m by paths & perio maker fra ti 1 { Cm = nie. Bo ¥ 3 tr 1 | Reyackis grew an i bivamie hada ¢ { artist & : abet | pon y > eoume at vag Fhe wis & ader in the swelldom oA the tou, the adored (ect of both | meerer gud omtepoken admirstion of al | the bachelors of her set. Her famiir had the POOTRROH | TR pif anaes oir in the Maryfower, bat her hiverd way the mest ceralean in the far svray Sowh rest whenes it cane. Hemoe it was with propriety that she proposed’ | to gratify ber ambition, snd posed, be i docked with a wonderful “ srimpome” | and waving numberioes plorses, dopant 1 | img herself with equanimi «| of a rearing, planging sted ty ras the Laek The artist had a Soe subject. Nood- ! 4 50 beam to say be rendered it full justios i When 8 vax vas Snidhed, the im thie was placed opon ex- Be artist's stodio, ahd every: antindy dropped in snd 1 it After 4 Lismiay wor } seen all they wanted «f fmestiene 8 portrait it errabor 8 Walls, Wr nr Taiid for. The pore Sir Joshom pleasast to him. He adulict af to the aloaninable Wopping in” apes the you andl MAKING LNNeSYRENIY reInar worent” of all kinds of Incp wnents, entil at last Nfs be wrilen $0 the child of axe, and Or Fg Ir hesl " £ * t wl riane i iz despair be decided to return to his ritive east and shandom all his dreapws ad 75 4 was densely cipvered sand the growth was so thick that #f was inxs Lis tome ¢ than tn fom feet thr romyrh Bend of me a cluster of reeks ofr “l a temporary place to fit down An eeiioy the view, and 1 made for it J 3 I reachod the peurest rock a tremen dons shaggy animal arose apparently from under roy feet, and I immediately Eder hy ST oe TD 2 5 ¥: #1 recognized in him the brown tear of : whose fieroeness the natives had been | telling roe for works My first instizet dese 80 had my gun beem in my right tear reared on his hatnebes and wie go wait and see what be intended doing which he turped his lead froma side to gide and licked his chops {no mist sug- | gmetive fashion, he dmpped on all fours, { sand with wonderfal quickness turmed { and sprang cut of sight in the dens undergrowth. When I retuned to carp | amd related my experience, Tab-tah-rek, | my native guide, assed me that the ' bear mumet recently have eoncluded a | therw se Bo would haves | heavy meal or stacked xo os “Rema ofivrs from some of the ves | sald oy 2 Bars tay during the sunsmer of | hunt, and ore of the | ng fea ford wont ashes | 3 shot 190 yarda distant | { Cadi thong of the | simon Lia gun nnd faved | “The sho 2 went wide of the mark, tat | at the report of the gan the bear started | {or the was 160% with the oilers repeater; Int, 8d wry bm straight at his enemy stent 10 feet of the hunter, the bar rose on his bannches and prepared to close. Blood was posring ih streams | down his b Ys upper jaw, bot he 'was so full of fight | that the fnal outcome of the straggle | wonld have ee exireme ir Aoubtfal bad | yom to hurry ap or sep Lively They : It ancthe ended the #0 : through the brain. An examination of | the besr's body shower than Be had been | strock six word Sarty of the body arfinarily con ve da siderad vital and would #oadiless have | the vitality of theme | animals is almost incredible gre cited of their ronning over 339 after being shot throm the hears, “‘Tast snowy, while e 1 wes at Sar 1! int, tw rare in, aftiw an 1b nth in the vi 3ity t| es repeated having killed | 43 t fay they killed @rven. In | order to show that tier were 10g «ion ning k suns they heought with them, and sold thom 21 a trading poit at Bund Poing. During the sammer of 1591 two prospectors were | locking for coal lands near Pores Maller, nnd aly a mile from the shore they | nse. brown bear on Px sence of ov Portage bax #13 bears One day the ™ nnters’ " ; ade Sau ¢ wrt gaged in 3c. hing sulmon in » amall | ptream. ¢ of the prpectors immed:- | gely 5 Om fire, and evidently wound d is tht in the thick brash Being anxions Shnte the skin tha two roeg started to follow the wonnded animal They haunot gone a dozen. steps before the ented and wounded brute tamed on hent and before either one old fire a | shit @ seized one mam by the lag snd | bit tmearly off, and then sprang spon | | his corpanion and knocked him senee- : | oss wih the hiow od his terrible paw. | Havingas he thoaght, finished his ame { putes, th tes qoietly ambied off, and | | was so from the sreng « 2 Tutte. i nently found dend =» fiw bran | | : { off fuime in the wild prairie tows of the | West, ‘Anson the inartistio and mnpreten tions citizens of the town was a certain highly prosperons stable keeper who was aware of the circumstances connected | with the nopaid for picture and the painter's inmvecunicsity. The night pee- ondinig the former's proposed departune for the city of his birth it was given ont among the good people roundabout that the stable keeper had purchased the fire Liours, apd ot nightfall artist snd stabliman bad the satisfaction of oniving » visit from the i tives of the picture's o quired som was gladly paid by them. Two buosdred fell the lot of the Chiengo Tribune. ONE HEAD USHER 1s 5. the Proverbs that the | ctblers eh Kiren ure always poorly sbod : be pestan ~nt man oes home for | dinner, amd the bartender is a total ab stainer. : The draggist may patronize the faith | cure and the railway man keows of no jroater luzary than a ride in a buggy. | "Le itrect car condnetar is glad to get | day off, so he can take s long walk A more remarkable case” than any of nadead ran. Hie charge | | {bese is thee of the head usher at the a shower of Palkia from | {hepter, and ond theater in particular hough Yed- | Probably every playgoer in Chicsgo waded; the infuriated animal id | }mows him The title of “head usher” an instant end roshed | goes him an injustion He is more like a When within | | host or the chief of a reception commit- ™; bedy. One bullet had shattered | 1ack fn) to your fambled bands and shout, -» tes, : There sre head ushers who poumes yon, grab the coupons, thrust them “Pirst aisle to the right 7’ There are other bead cabers who tell of the party arrived and | hve ond warning that all coupons mune by shooting the bente ne ready. They shout, “Hey, thers! * and we constantly distracted decanse of the fm mes. Three of the shots | pense rvaspousibility which they imagine , is resting upon them. As soczi 2s a sippy yOUnRg man gels into a hex office or is engaged a8 an Instances | iden he begins to imagine that he vars | vrmas the honse, the oompary and 8 good | part of the fremeage in the bhwek But the exceptional head wmsber i» calm, polite, attentive and solicitons. No matter how rapidly the crowd may pout in, it seems oy every ane who CoInes TRCRiTes SOT CORrtesy af his i Lands Ho n't shogt or grad and the szmall children are not afraid of him "The most remarkable thirg about this model master of ceremonies. however, A ¥ is that be knows very little abound actors : 4 plays. The other evening, when th» house was crowded and the performance was | heing received with noisy approval, a man who came into the foyer between brute badly. ut be got out « | nts remaarked to hin, “Well its » funny show.” : “1 dare say,” be replied; * “the house weems to like i" _ Didn't you see it?’ No; I was cut here all the time. *1s that so? Dun’t you step baside 0 | see the performances’ “Oh, no. My duties keep me hers. In fhe 15 years that I have been in this po- wition 1 have never seen a At first the man woaldn't “believe it, bat it was a fact dust the same —Chi- — : wh Tears Iz Her Ere. She was grown ou the world “Mercifoheaven !’ she gusptrl Considerably: turf was knocksd off the | i world where so struck it. ; | Befare anyiyiv conld reach wr she | i had risen and vas swiftly Jeading bes | bicycle away — own Topics. Jum roo a the chase 10 Tarry my Bae pand. — Detroit Tribune. There is no success so sweet as the soccess achieved by acting against the | Savice of our friends p——s ——— Te ——
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers