sss Ee SAS Pe er : Bow Wall Paper Is Made. Tt is very interesting to go through a wall paper factory and follow the proc eases of manufacture. The designs are the first things observed. Formerly there was a scarcity of these, bu! now SELF DEFENSE, Relating ting Theretn Laid Nows by United States district judge in gnsas instructed a jory that every. except within his own honse the requires a man to tun away and do } to escape from an assailant be filing him. The judge further hat when aseanlted on his own ses, bot ontside of his honse, 8 a his seme of uy ger by i Vapious designers have different fe killed his assailant to save himself from | cialties—some fincers, others architec. 3 bodily harm ean be accepted. | tural ideas, exc Rix uf rerent years This instruction was han ded “down : architects have devoted wany of thew vost ancient times when Wong ms of | TPAT8 TOT Ie to criginating wail pa it oomsisted of knives, bindgeons, | Pe gesigns. hb ann 8, etc., which an active man had | _A somplete drmign con x chanes of escaping. But it is pot | pisces—side wall, border and ceiling. plicable to these davs of revolvers The general width of patterns of the ind winchesters, whose bullets no man sida wall and ceiling, as need in the oan dodge or ontrun, and the United | Ales supreme court has sent it to the letter lumber garret. man sentenced to eight yours’ nt by the Arkansas joiee from the sopremp conrt an of. pew trial under a pew instruc te This pew instroction declares toad ¢r a ian may be, if hw bas a $6 be there and if he has not hime if provoked the assault, the law justi | “him in standing bis grovad and jts. The least that can be said of it 1s that it was net desirable a repeats bein trade in general Many of the bost effects are prod polars, but as meuny as 20 or 25 are sometimes ueerl. Each codor and shade fn a design moans a se pein lant provided the prov ealrstinces wre soch as to Batis y thet he had reascuabile grounds eving and acted on the belied fhe kidlg vens nidessary to protect f from great bodily harm ing nuy farther Jimitation on the Kill in self dcfense would abel together, Arkansas is only une Wawa y states in which » man may 4 deride very hastily whether he be tried for killing a fellow citi Jot the fellow citizen bo tried for Bhim. In these cases, with his 8 excitedly fixed im his assai le has po time to get legal sdvios pdy the necessities of the situs rongh the eyes of bystanders and jary will do that afterward, is tmder restraint enough When g that in saving himself from il of having to satiely » jr Lot a A am A Big Bridge. Oakland, Cal destipation.. It will span the Rio de fort euth. will be hauled to their place by aa ra Is It Another Cry of “Wolf? hy OAR hers tnterest ng ~~ lhocago this copy beng decided tg than those Record. AS TO VAN ALEN. Breckinridge ov Ven Alen—Acrept | pry sympathies, old man. Phi lade iplon - 5 1 183s juss ae well that Mr. Van Alen ons | fs not ony representative at Rome. —To | that Jimmy Yan Aden may be drives lo =! The muss Mr. Van Alen has got into iis what might be expected of a man # | whe spells Lis same that way. —Chis- Vian Alen ie sreneod of oelng the terms Ewes’ sal 2 a Hos inet Mtters te Mw Col 30 LBB OD RL pvt | thers is a flood, and a manufacturer most exerciss much artistic taste and bosiness ability m making selections | One was submitted to a New England manufacturer recently bY a wom, whe stated that it was dictated by epic sigts of three trade mnd macafactured by American | machinery, is 18 inches, snd the length | (of the repeat in ihe pattern 1s gither | 113 or 143 or 173, inches, ax suggests 4 | by the character of the design. the shorter | 2 the most satisfactory tothe : wal in papers containing only four to 85% arate roller to a hig ; the munulaiorer, — Philsdeiphin Toes | oo : EMA b ghe story moight leak cot and gf homes Lamps. near the city of Fan Salvador, | in the reyublie of that name, and will | be 860 fest Jug, in two spans of 430 | After being Ianded st the | nearest port the sections of the bridge | Acknowledgment wuost be made of | the receipt of a large and handsomely | engrossed war tamer from te far east, | WANTED TO BORROW HIM. The Queer Request Two Women Made and { A gevial Philadelphian, who for ob | vious reasons does not care fo havi his name printed on this occasion, secired # parior car seal on an express train for ahont to pass through the gates was eur prised to hear himself pocomted in fers). pine tones with the somewhat stariling question, ‘Please, mister, exmid I boo row you for awhile?’ Looking srommnd, he found two baizom women, who hastily and besitatingly explained that they were riding nn 8 pass made ont in the name of & gemtio man snd bis wife, and, ss the gentle | fhap wak pot present, they wanted the genial Jooking citizen to place his bought ticket at the Avpomal of ope lady . und take the other one wnder his wick. while he personated the absent owner of the pass with an inward gualo, leet his own 3b sory, “Yew can take yoar § be 8 SIE promptiy did so by tocking the arm SE fate the Lar, £ weliy traveling feading her | pronad Ta be righ * pamidns, and the & @ of Bigs. Buti dide't —Fhilsdel What will be the biggest bridge in Central America 1s pow boilding st : After it is eounpleted 11 | will be taken apart and shipped fo its | ete Ad ASS AS Whimsirs]l Father Schanbel, | years year. He was soither Christian, A god many years nao workmen, whi Rik bis and I sprke to him aboot it op his hands in a egrprised way and exclaimed, “The w wheelbarrow load of 1177 romp (rman soe fon he died net said, Well, Father Hehaninl yom fipd you sued OF 2 Bed mvwtit ach ty four years alt,’ be roplied "An how do you hike it most be matisfiod. That was a Aevorite marin With Bing, to boast ix, cotitented. He i year there was, for | scarcity of tomatoes, apd be crop In reply to &x quiet was getting for thers, he Page dollar nnd fry cunts a bushel de field Ah, vail, ast fied. Chicago Juterior, ¥. Bw As Tr : i E bore Ye The Origin of “Sieaghlon Bottie ™ Did it ever ocowy to you to when the sxpression * Stoughic tle" came from? Bim about it seriaia Stoughton's bitters that need fo be very popular when I was a 1 | Bronubton ts Bitters was a sort of sano, very woak and taibeiess, add pe Ip uveelesy. Bo when sarbody sas pobcd Ra %. At cones be began vigirous | stealtbily and systematically, * a member of the society from Cincinnati. The snitst- | moe i€ everywhern and by evershody aa- he brethren derestimate). mod quite too much over. Jooked in valostions of character. It 18 the sin of fretting. It is us common a4 air, as speech, 80 common that pniess it rises above its wrsal monotone we da pot even observe it. Watch any ardina- ry coming together of people and see how many minotes it will be before somebody frets—that ia, makes moore of ty | less complaining statement or something a! or other which probably every coe in Is-| the room, or in the car, or the strees | curner, it may be, know before, and probably nobody can help Why say The Bin of Frovting. ta dinuer at the exclusive Cli- ‘with which the proceedings “33% is wet, it is dry: somebody has bro ken an appointment, 311 cocked a meal; | stopidity or bad faith scmewhers haa r| resulted in discomfort. Therears plenty i of things to fret about. It is simply se mi ae specialist h of medicine and surgery I” ing, even at the simplest if one only keeps a sha things. Even Holy Writ says we are prone to trouble ss sparks fiy wpwasd | Bot even to the sparks fiyiog spward, in the blackest of ymcke. there is a bine sky above; and the less time they waste | on the road the scomer they will reach it. Fretting ia all time wasted on the road. —Helen Hout Literature ANG FLAT awe. Mrs. Strembon (Phillis as was) oe her husband at the door ss he cw home one evening recently. She Jookes | tired, but triumphant. “I've arranged all your books for ! you," she said. *‘Such a piece of work "| §5 was,’ and she led her husband to the bookcase, where he kept most of bis rel | erence books To “There, ' said she “You bad boxes of all sizes and colors in that case—i was horrible to Jook at. I have pot sll of the same color together and arranged them all by their sizex . You won't find a single tiny book in between two great big ugly thizgs of another color. Now you will try to keep the bookcase neat, won't you, dear—I've spent so much | time over it" 3 Bo Strephon kissed Phillis and prom. {sed — New York Son. Hardening St In hardening, bright steel should not | be exposed naked to a fire or flame. It may with advantage be placed in a cov. | ered box containing bone dust or animal charcoal in some other form, or another plan is to spear soap all over the article to be hardened. Water or oil is the te Ba- | diam generally selected for plunging the what you article in weoolit Petroleum is recom: ‘mended if extra hardness is desired Either mercury or salt water will give | gress hardness, but the steel is rendered brittle. Ofl {athe best mediom for bard | ening steel if toughsess is sequired. — Het Pt EES wr | tone bitters on a dines tubilo | There js one gin which it seems ls | anything aboot it} It ix cold, it is bet, | found in the course of every day's liv-| around se neelens as & bulls of to saving that bs wa a Stompliton | the, until as an exprescon fier pon term.’ WW MRL IBREG Post Schooimaster—Jobuny, ma you me anything sou have to be than for during the past Guirter? Johony (withent besitaticnj-- los ¥ * Schoolmaster— Well, Johny, wha in? wonths, London Answer. CARVED IN THE BARK. A Cramp of Trees Upon Which Appesred the Names of Many Soldiers. #1 don’t quite snderstand, and 1 sev. er oomld' said an observer, whet public places. favorite objects upon which tO carve beech offers » field most fuviting to the knife of the carver. I saw ome a bund gina, close by the left bank of James river. A ravite made back from the river, and at the bead of this © there was a spring. as this clomep of beach trees. “The pamen carved on (hese mos were those of soldier wha bod evn en camped thersabout in the fume of ihe civil war and who bad onime to to spring for water It was in 8.0 saw them, so that they must have there toen at lems 14 yurs. 01 probably been there imper third of the pamias wire stil bg Macy of them wers the nazis of of Penravivania regiments S5e Nad bevorse illegible were mainly these that Lad been carved oa nae thes There Was oie hig tree that had np on it. I sbemid thunk, 500 names They 5 ground. It seemed a if grane of those by men who swung down fri the ret branch, sod one om by men standing ou the ground, ur that perhaps tree a borse stood. “These LAMEs MAY every ope of them, and yet it seared thiv was a case in w might have been done in hich the owrving something York Sun. — A By FE IS to got married on Chaistmas. Jacobe— Vot you goin « give bert sew an den 1 vill Grabably give bes 5 sway Reading & few days ago, and ae be wos “Which te my wife” be inquired, | sent bevier ball should over bear the on gir,’ snug | fie lady in search of an escort, and he | the voumger fair vos (opder Bis OWD snd | ht: 27 g 5 hd 3 The omnis IPOD KX OmIY Peet In the fransaction was dos to a fear that Father Schanhel, who died » fom Ago, was weil past bis eightiearh | dosed in narnest ‘a haniing earth Trion coe of Nis dots, eperonched on one of mine, | He thon Bode earth 8 made of dirt, snd shall we quarrel showt a Has kad a it A short times be { wn the street ane Ach, vall, ve ,@ preat | pd 3 jarge | a5 what be | SP in| be satin i wonder | Senator Palnser need | it the Inst time I sow him and 1 asind “Why.” said he, “it comes from a Jobmny—Why, when yom broke 5c arm you cocidn t ick oe for tr prompts people to write their pames in | Troes bave always been t i names, and the oth | bark of the | eve ont on that side of | bar d smooth | bavk of the | of beech trees upon which thonsands of | names bad been cut. This was tn hi * | ar came behind and posbed. Aromnd the apiag - Ny ii jish, which Is 2¥ Bad | 1y well, how munch money § had. It was | 2 po place 4 argde with them, for if ther | had left me thers 1 might bave Deen | * | thers yet. epoircled It for 30 feet pp from the Among the highest must have been nt Jd tmagime that men stood cn one another's shoalders to reach above the Dames already carved there was lod up beside the open whose back the carver | simply as a pastime, | scmehow as though | more than a merely idle spirit "'— New | Laraels—My daughter Renbel vas goin \ It ia high time thet & word shonid be spoken in apology to the mach abused puppy. who has for years bees made 16 stand as an enablem of the moet desploabie | member of the human family. : When s ran Jiscovers traits of wean. | peas. whon be betrays a meddimome, pry F Rati ee i £ of i i ing, eaddish disposition: we sre loo prone to tharacterize him ae a ‘puppy’ without stopping to think of the eontumaly there by heaped upon tie eanine aritonsl of im | FOALUTE TASTE | Intend of beings term of reproach, # poppy,’ properly eomsidered, is & bigh and ondeservad compliroent heitowed up i om the nhiect of our contempt, bat white | we thus nnistentionally hone the adh, | we doa distinct and unwarranted i=jus ioe 30 the puppy. for it is 8 sort of insinn ation that be is no beiter than the man te whom he is likened, inasmuch as hy raid tng » cad a PUPPY WE As TAUGH Ae ERY that i the puppy in a mean, # king upstart of | a eresture, which be is not. The puppy Is frank. free and frais pore. siwavs in the best of humor, with | petiving apderhand dr mean abont him He pever sniks in Lis Eenipsl por sam | plains because things ui pot go jovet am he wants hom wo ga Ho makes fire Ge with everybody, the rich and the poor, fim Mig ard the low the god HORI are iB aRiy, and he tw po rospecler of giik, wi sud broadcloth above otto or fasten oF { I rag# | | Fie 4 ett sgoenrnieh as 60 Bs . akon what be given to Bim gilli, ypuch move ae he can get bold of. % Fie man ard does rend you Herman at and | | Bexuolish stray rablers and make “mane! | ings of your ralmeona, but he does ail hin | | jwosely and without soalion Ji be his} safety vals the joint given Tire where | by he wuay bio ofl pane part of his ex- | I aherant liveliness The puppy is the very a iptesaenee nf nimared good nature, Flv 8 ho cin arent. his the merry making die position that would bave BATTS, ANG mal and vegetable, share in Bis Joye Therefore, to call 8 monn spirited fol | | Jew a puppy Iv 8 gratuitous and cowar ; LC papted [hel upon the four Boted ihpen a, and it be Hive that justics was Got Lo Loe | puppy by Bo fodigrer nunking Bln The sme Lean and the anabogae of Uhl mat wa Amid | by his pare "A puppy does pot put of Aire por turn op his Dome at people w Lat fe fancies are | below Biss if, he ver considers | anybody below Biro oeitho dows dee Ine | Saige in Naoids foore potent than wriiR i Sor make biel? odorous with clparetie | I ogoake. i i The poppy ix mbebievona Lut neve | malicious. He tries Io aw every friend and was never known to sak U1 of any one. : | Then why bas be Deen maligned ald these years! Come, let ux Bo longer do | grade a good fellow, and a merry, by cm pioving bis as 5 mile of all that is mean | and despicable in homan pature — HBostos | Transcript. i a $ 3 £ i 2 i i i i i 1 3 § i % A divs. Bd sd Brat gt i Phrloenl i 5 Se oh arts ROBBED IN A PYRAMID. Experience of a Daitimore Men With the Arabs of Egypt. Dr James J Milis of Baltimore made | 8 visit to Furope and Egypt. He passed | through an experience that was as on. | pleasant as it wan novel-that of being i | held up and robbed within the gloomy | | and musty walls of the great pyramid | | of Cheops, by the Nils Discosing the : trip, Dr. Mills said: i © “It Iheltolivea ina foreign city, it - wromid either be Paris or Cafre. Catra |} | js onlike any other city in the world | There is a strange mingling of the white | hit lanes 1 Onin Ey La ma deh ha : faces of the (resid with the inky kink faces of the Nubians and Sudaness | * and the yellow skinned Arabs, who oon | stitute the bulk of the population. Of : | course 1 wanted to visit the pyramids, ‘and 1 nndertock to do it without being | accompanied by a dragomnan. Against the advices of friends, I set cut on the | back of a donkey, with no attendant | | save the donkey boy! Aw the boy cond | speak po English and I comid speak no | | Arabian, we did pot talk much. : "Wa were followed cot of Cairo by & pwarm of beggars, whoss cniy cry was } | pemohed the vicinity of the pyramids, we | | were met by a Borde of Arabs, who ' conld speak but a few words of brokea | English. They volunterad to take me | fnwide the pyramid. With two of the | | wild ooking sons of the desert we en- | § { | gored the great pyramid of Cheops, de- | seending long, gloomy passages, passing | the brink of an enormous well, travers | ing a footway which jad along hy the | | tombe of pumerons dead and up a par | | pow passageway with a foor as #octh | | am glass ; i | “Here the ssoent was #0) steap that it was pecessary fur coe Arab go in | front and pull me along, while the oth- | Wien we | reached the end of this passageway, we ] ‘ sat down forest. The Rimmosphess ¥a8 | sifting, while myriads of black bate flew clamstly about and gave an ano 3 | Anny Appearance to the piace. It was i shen that my two Arad) guides began to think of ‘backskeesh’ and ask a Bag 1 aodderstand paanfal “1 tried to make them think that 1 © did not nonderstand, but the result of it, all was that they turned my pockels in. side cnr and took ail the money I bad. | Then they piloted me ont in great glee | and told me that 1 was u valy glod man’ 1gotback to Cairoassoon as 1 | gould, and thers my friends told mel might have well expocted to have been robbed. = Baliimore American SH Kip AAAI iY AAR 8 rie A Stlent Yoloe Speake. The Monroe Sovirne woeske alow, And bide si Barope hear That oo snoroschneonts av allowed Upon this hetudapheoy That Unciedsam ovens wars of pesos And wants them be prevat] Among ail me BU was whisdl Onnee And wariine offi fall Bat will not jets foreign state, However gromt she te, Taare thos wide or desninsse Aspe rioan Howry. All if Greg Britain tries W take Boas Vevey well : The sect snd wo male Tne Gio within him Bath And mar cv Ba Thal aa te nol Bo Or. dues ing 8 » chal Flin mater kd ovdviRd Butta Tie a Saigon Paw / No ¥ 2 3 3 § i = 3s 3 | Hgaments in the nape I gitiem iv easily shown : | man pods as he is falling ssleep, for as | | avery now and again {to just $1.59 | to chest the Lard by sortmg a plogged | Tork Herald i 3 | quickly forget and forgive Women, on | sex who by wend or deed hints that the ¢ from it, is possibia : all the people for miles around are due © emtile shrank 0 | seera frantic tH hide, au | Seores of people yet feel the effinin — | New York Recorder ho the pannfscturers —Spokane Chron i WHY WE STAND UPRIGHT. Wa are 80 aoonstomaed to standing vp right as a natural attitode that few of us think what a special complex mech- + | apie is required for this puprose. A moment's consideration will show that the crdinery explanation of the ersct positicn (the penter of gravity to be di- pactlv shove the fest) is insafScient When 3 man is suddenly shot, whether | from the fromt or behind. he drops oo Bis face, for the truth is that thes is much mors weight in the front of the spinal column than bebind it. The fact is that when we ave standing s large number of powsrfal moe les {both frout and back) are me ilaneons- Jy at work, the «fects of their action ng to neutralize each cfber. Thos, | the jogs would fall forward ware it not that they are kept vertical on the foot at the back of the heel At the same tinse the muscles of the thigh are tight ened $0 84 to prevent us faking s sitting position, and the moscies of the back are pulled tense so that the tronk does not stoop forward. The head is prevent. od from dropping om the chest by the | of the peck { net its normal po | by the fact that 8 That the npright is | soon as the controlling pervons furee is | Aeadencd the head drops forward bY 1H bown weight, only to be poled bak fot portion agdin with a jerk whine the Brain beergpes sudden iy aware of on pm vena! atiitnde - Reatnsh- Amer 2 { Ministers Pay. i Why do pot eomntry Christian pooph | give at least a decent support 10 that | ministers? That sole sph ingg r i = mil i ba pets | ue » Thm @ wt ar ropaki Yok more Than be ix warie, ted, eared, fondled and snl 0 fa: rope whenever be bas the tovithaw he OF | mins and gets to feel (hat be MAD ida] to be worshinred The cones minister starved tv death oo aisry at ail and gets oo Sook as though he had heen shot through a Endod ir du 10 pe booed be will bave & govel Vigee ind heaven, for he hos wpvineg Lat a goed : time here. (me of (hess pear Creator fot 100 miles fre i frou Nowe York, Wis so wretchiedly off that kis parishioners got { op An entertainment as x benefit for hire. They were very careful tO extract freon the sam total every expense to which they had been pot. and when toe set Fam was handed to Bim if amonnted Think of that, ye smd wnled folk whe want the gospel of brotherly Jove preached to you and think a copper into the contribat fom box ——Now LESS TRUTHFUL Riis Je a Man's Assertion In Regard to Women Comparnd With Men A man who bas made a stady of women and their ways remeried the other day {hat Women are, ax a set. hs frank and rrathfnl than wen. Whateve | truth thera iv in this assertion wn Nay | be sore it is at least pot innate, tut due | to the diTerenrn in The requirements of the two meses and the seseqoent if ferenon in their aducation. Men ave taught to reveal (roe natures from the cradle to the grave Men are taught that, Being bomot, they are mbjeot 10 varions passions and fable to fail nin error which it is not pecvssary for them to copoeal, for if they deviate fom the straight and pareow sath the word will ot 5k, ak the contrary, ate faoghy that if they are pot inwardly statoes of decornm, they must miske iv appear that they woe, for the world a merciless to ope of their smallest totleriog on ber pedestal, not to meation even a momentary descent | In short, women ave required to oon cenl their real human seives from all bebolders as absolutely as they conceal their lower limbs in the copventivpal draperies of femininity, while men areas | free to reveal their real selves to the world aa to clothe themselves in the nether garments of their sex. Bat con cealment or lsck of frankness 18 by po wenn ontrathivisess — Philadeiplics S TRANG £ NOISE. Gn SO, Many Persons Terrified Ins Little Ren: tueky Vilage The little village of Stark, Ky, and cussing cps of the strangest coonrrenon that ever ag cand that comupniy On Toesday last, n beautiful day with set mach wind, 8 borritis noise, inde | scribuble fSeove, assavited fae wir i { gpecticn reparatory HIS REASONS FOR BELIEF IN HIS COUNTRY’S TRIUMPH, Thee In Last Contest Food Enough For Several Year: Warts Delligerency Tors oguition From the United States Major Chenirs] Manoel Suarez Delga- dn. commonly spoken of a8 (General Soares" ix the insurgent chief in charge of the Fifih wrmy corps of the Coban forcer, with headgoarters af present in the vicinity of Monicaragon, Branding fall £ feet in beight, he pre: sents an iden] appesrancs ix sn near gent chief, kiv massive form clad in the simple white linen costume of Lhe COBB. try. His features sre of a decidedly sqpiline cast. and his eyes show the foe- nity of resdy commend over men : Tie headeuarters of the Fifth Coban STImY Corps (OnRIST at present of a large desertad toharsn shed, without walls snd with » roof partially blows sway by the rian! severe ops Lave prreralont in Cobn 3 proaches are gu large deta] of cavalrrmen, Wh are rail armed ard chi evidence of mere mill tary train tg than ix the present tates of the baa oF Sem Conban | forces {nn thes ¢ Rants Clam, otherwise Ae BRIER ride oMelentiy BY 8 L! BEE Le eo Compneend of 8 Soe hosing wr of whe have given wo laprative profes Borg to Bet 10 IND DriDMssom soe dliie operation of the Coban " Army of Lib- erty.’ : At prosent thers is with the peners! Ennesto ¥. Stirling, the civil goswrpor of the province, wha id 8 8 Tour of in ta the estabiish- £ BA Sasi | ment of places for the manufacture of | clothing and complete equipment, ave | the arms and ammonition, for both the | Coban mfantey snd cavalry, Very come plate shops ars at preset going at fail blast in the mountains of Santiago snd Puerto Principe, established there hy General In Chief Gomer These supply fhe armive with headquarters in those . | places, anil thoes 15 ba established wre | intended to clothe snd equip the large fopne to bo shortly centralized in this priTanee fie sayy avery pacific means bave heen ged to pot from the Spanish coetes and rulers a proper recognizance of Coban rights, tint without ayprevighle efeot, Coba is allowed 30 got of sbomt 400 mem iors of the Spanish legislative body, and of thin ineffective pumber the # lows dogs of 34 3 coprroihd from Madrid, thus waving sit vores effective for Coe ban rights apd 2564 dotpionted by A uly desire for Spanish agrandisement. A Poritions inramershie have been "nt for The amelioration of speoific aboses, and all withoot effect Unjust and grievons Taxes are Weied open oil the Cuban pomsasions, aod the laws reguist. ing domestic manufacturers Are SG hard tint the residents of tipe island are com- patied to buy almost every manniec- rural siotiole of counpptee 12 50 exorkt. Ant Sinre fram SpaniEh panulacharers, and Tom them solely, asthe import do- thom 7 aetically shot oot from Cuba the wes expensive andl vastly better made prcdoce of sther nathins Thin is ssvecinily se of the United Mares. which ix the nainral market wo wirich the Cubans go for the purchase of masafactured sommpodities, and 0 where they andonbrediy will go shoald they smooeed in gaining their independ- Ar tthe probable dorgtion of this war, shomid victory be delayed the comptry bas fond encagh in sight towmp- port 30.000 men for years. Should this prove bwoMeiint, the smaller towns will be taken and their provisions need, as wax dope the Init five years of the last war, In that straymie 7,000 men restated the Spanish foroes fir ten years. There are pow 80 060 bsurgents in the Seid, and when safficient arms can be had, 20.004) more are ready 15 join the army. The general believes that the sumber of men in the field, their discipline and equipment are soch as 10 merit roe- cgmition of their helligerwncy by the United Staves, which he thinks would tend to speadily temminate the war in favor of Coba, ficst by the ressendous moral force soch an set woanld have spon the nations at large, and second Hecate then Cabay money wonld have po hindrance in it cutfow for Amer ean aries and axnuunBition. General Soave is abwoliotely ennfident af Cuban sarees, sud that pot far off, —fyivester Scovel in Pitsburg Dis — Ey The lstamd of Thao Tie wolianie dst of Tanna, one of was belwron a soream and a Row an had Suit iuo oA terror hat taupe almost parsivaed with fear is the earth ain we. Pigs and sheny fF Fo in wed a ol a the moet pitiful if eraxy The sound lasted faliy a minate, and many womens faipted. No one 18 sure whether it came from the air or earth, or what caused it, but The Carter County Bugle says nothing Like 8 was ever beard of. It was confined toa space Sve miles square. Beyond thas uo che how qd it pita ise ROBE Thevoughly Hammes. Bloosin—That street just below is quite a thoroughfare, isn't it? Blagzin-—No; that's not a thorough: fare at all, but the crowd likes to use it because thers's a sign theve that reads, “Private way-——dangeroos passage Rosimry (razetta ! gw any Years Now Hetirtdes jfroup. has been for a aera state of erup- Vain of dre hy night which ix clearly fstanon Nuch i the wi, anu Lo Rtg A af A Qreak w | ssrrainty with which this ane appears thing vessels fn the YRUIILY are nsruct- ad by their saliing dirdetions Ww Wok out for it ust ss they world do were I+ an ordinary Lighthouse To Ft the Case “1 wish you world give me 3 name for a sew brand of butter.” said = dairvman to a customer. certainly, answered the onstomer ; sil 3b im like the last om sent ma I wonld sugi@et Sanson. ** ee Datyoit right of discovery, apd if we cal re- what is old more briefly and bright v than others this also ODecomes Our own Livy right of conneet. —Coltan. A little wit and « great deal of IR * How 1s Prepared. 3 The dried Jeaf has little of the arama of the manufactured tobacen. This in des veloped by a kind of fermentation which it i subjected in the warehouses ola pature will famish a man for sate, but the greatest iostanoe and vains of wit i to command wall — Tillowon, Dr. C.F Sco the state veterinarien of Wisconsin, sys thas when the gold murod is eaten by horesy It prodofs & fatal disease simetisy ee comecnprion. “
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers