if 1 i : i 3 i : 8 hioride of sodium | 2 i to the gl 834 alnminiam, Taek | : Sguesion. 8, Loy thom prey ev hours. The water in ent tices In i%orent wae each pom | rived tor blood tLe inte pperor of mon The FR xo aght gy at Muigna 1 | atnong the Etrurian remains which their father disenterred daring more se than $0 years, to the fnvichment of 1 most of the great masenms of Fare, Pierre avd Antoine lived like bane Jd din, en r off women and shooting the ind Ent to sop Or came 6 n. Pierre fired his fina) shot or Noir, at Awtenil, and killed Prince of Musignano, was married toa! : daoghter of his uncle Joseph. Ho re- against the pope, was president of the Roman conatitoent, and such violent domestic tyrant that his wife | | Fan sway to Paris to supplicate the em- TY x to Protect her and her son-—the fatare cardinal. i The Prince of Musignano met this by threatening to publish cortain papers of | ‘the first Lucien proving over and over | ai the dishonor of Josephs ; deat of ie wife, a, put an endl} {40 the fend. The late Prince Locien, vi who obtained & civil list pension of | £350 a year—abont the fourth of the en-| pire fand-—figured in Paris during the second republic as an ultra Liberal. He! played this card until be got a large ol sum of money snd 8 senaforship. This : pot wk Sucesny, a4 bo had 10 Jive out France. a. the youngest of the four | there, ea 8 charmed Me. His lite wy, “This is my eye, rpeating wv requiring A at repeat it in unison. Other po the room are in the same way broaght | to the attention of the chilcron. Later, when they have made sufficient progres bi the haguage, it becca deo yw: | accomplish this, a boy or girl is directed id | to ran slowly round the soon, when the oh | teacher and children may in unison, “That boy in running.” repeating the sentence seviral times. The boy is then told to halt, and the teacher and pupils} | Laay io unison, “That boy did ron” | again, “That boy is standing wn hat boy can ran,” ‘That boy is walking,” “That boy walks fast,’’ “i oa walk, =] ean run,” “1d wal Thess and other sentesions, aa they aro spoken, are written on the black ‘hoard by the toacher, and the popils it- | write them on their sisten. Thus they ig | are taught the language and tanght 10! | spell, Sead atid Write wits shanltase- ously. : : The Compan Plant. The compass. plans is one of the odd- | aid, | © creations of the vegetable king- i dom. It derives its name from the fact | that its leaves always point directly | + north and south, 8a if you are vot on western praizie and lose your way 8 tam. Iti is avpretentions in appeRrance "71 ard bear yellow flowers that are pot unlike field daisies Tt has a remack- | i thin leal, #0 thin as to be notice shie even to the untutered eye. The soppass plant is "pally a8 western fii or apd is indigenous to the prairies | oo List section, A Amine, WS No op—————— Jee Water Attracts Polson, A gcient.ie piper adds these new ter- rors fu doe water ut nu beverage: | It says tie sete povessses the quality ax | of aftractivg io Hseif the poisonous gases exhaled Ly the (cogs and the pores _iof the body, Use of the best ways to : purify a freshly painted room is to set stout it basins of loid water, changing | these busing will be found to be deadly | poisonous, The Real Resson. Bride (a1 the wedding, to best aan j— | Why is marriage often a failure? i Best Man--Because the bride does) os many the bess man, ~Deotroit Free 23 —t em i ms mh \ pots wil Fiteraty wud archmol og | hits. The eldest, whom I remember as | RE Siar ae tor ; pecpls have de pt fo rhyme. The | wird *‘pitmth, or exmuple, 4 one of | | word CR 44 mo ogord HE oserms | FEIY ean to secure ach iioe for, bor cs a | waiter of foot, trving to find sorevihing | Fa rhiveoe with “alvor” wearily deove a ! Leinciow writer of yore jnsane long ago | AS a Jas resort he advertieed in the | pewspapers and received but one reply. It came from the master of verbal con- tortion, W. 8B Cilbert, Bir Arthar Sol Hepn's erstwhile pertiior, who submit. ted the word ehilver.’' He wasn't {quite cluar, be said, ad to what a oo. ver might bo, but Le had son the word fn ndvertiserwents of sn ew of farm stock ami bad an idea, which ix correct, that it described a species af sheep. “Orarge’’ i another word withont rhyme. “Gulf” is also without an Eng- lish partner, and “calm” and “ensp” ary alike solitary. Many poets who have memight ba vain for rhytoes to ' ‘revenge’ antl “avenger will 168 be appeased win they earn that bot te 7 2 inte ‘is now, happily for vimsificrs, growing se; obsolete, for there in ® word which y| rhymes with it. ‘Sear’ has boen dar ingly Hirked at the end of a line with halt’ vr ‘calf,’ but this is a practice fo be disonraged. “‘Boalp’ rhymes only with “Alp, but, jks “habe” and “artralate,”’ it would require much in- gennity to find an excuse for bringing these words into juxtaposition. “Fale” hast om poversl cocasiong. by an abuse of poitio License, been asocisted wit ynlee," though the corrvot French po puticistion of the latter word wonld « troy the rhyme Of thn pumes of Paces the African 1 town of Timbuktu ke Jong been foo | moun for being without shyme. The he! nearest sncoess thst apy post has ever New| satinined in this respect was when ir some old verses descriting a desert hunt 1 “onmsowary”’ was made to rhyme with i “missionary” spd “Timbokin'' with | “thin buck foo. "New York Presa Aan a SNA Nt O'CONNELL'S ELOQUENCE. RA rn Which Ye Used Quite Freely. Arseny the stereotyped ornaments of y. hin eloquence was A favorite weference © to “the majestio monntaies and fertile lie of green Irsiand.” Ones at test part of Ireland, he exclaimed jn the {taro A patriotic speech, * “Look | [tal- mountain,” eto. — oompliance ‘with an | Which request would bare severely tested of | the nptics of his audience. {| Apotber time, when boasting at the! | Corn Exeliange of the great attendance adressnd at a meeting be had ‘ at Kilkenty, he outdid Palstal’s 11 men «| in bookram somewhat after the follow | ing fashion: He began by stating the pumbers present at the meeting at 50,- 1 000, “and who will deny,” be cantio- | ? after | vod, ‘thas the cause must be important sion | semble together thess Bi, 000 men? Jen} he | DO man suy that they gathered merely p | from a foeling of prrvonal megard or ouriowity dm may account Jr womid he a, | abird to suppose that 106,900 men jo! would lease their homey to ook at an { elderly anil rather eorpolent gantionman No, siz, when that pesceful army of 150,600 lreisbnwen ecomjregated round me, their presepee spoke, trompet} | tongroed, their firm reacintion never fo} desint fronis the stroggls undl Deland ahem have ber own partisment again Rnd Feely maltitedinous pies werd as orderly and pacific as they wire resointe ios determined. Ob, with what suapeskable delight do 1 songs in the condact of these 200,600 noble fellows,” te. And thus saved slong, aphdene apes the swelling tide of Ris tmajinariie, each sentimwe adding ub east 50,180 to the previoss mount until at last be arrivid at, I saink, 300,000. ~ Newcastle (Bugland) Cheon The curious affection for old Cremena + 4 wicking, trove std basses in by no mesam om mtdern lacey, The Stradivarios vio Hn, whicl wy excellent father gave me when I wis 10 years of ngs. was priced at 100 guioess in 1534. Bat, to go stil) farther baik, wo were fold by the Eng | lish wewspapers that fo September, den the fumons violin «f Conut Traot- maunsdor!, grand equerry to the Em- perder Clirles VI, which be had pur chased dines from the aelebrated Tyro- Jean wally, Jacch Staiger. He paid snd padertook Wo provide the vender us Jonas ba dived with a good dinner every day, ss well ss 100 florins a motith 14 cash and eviry year a pew coat, with golden brapdenbarghs twe casks of bedr, lighting and fosl, and, as be mopght require, with {2 baskets of fruit siennally for hippos! and us many for bie oid mursh {house keeper). w—FRipeil One Ga the Friocess. A gorxl story of the late Priocess Alice hus come out on the occasion of the striking of a seedal for the fishermen al Ushoasr, She ouce visited the mint ubexpecioily ad a time when some modale wire beipg male for nepsenme utissioned offers of the armuv. While she was being shown through the build: mg, the oficials thoughts 5 would be a nest TRI to stamp her name and the dare on one of the awdals and present it tO her. She accepted the gift and thim duet,” The fixie Paper puwwey used in this country vias issuvd by Pennsylvania in 1TH. Iu the early pars of that year £10,000 vas isvoed on the credit of the wolony, aud a Pw months later £30,000 pore folbowed a “pongo” and 'Btenchenge. cif’ fee | Athlone, 10 oie very orm of the flat | 1778, twain was sold by nuotion at Pres | Bim down in cash 78 golden crowns | in cose be should marry, us many hanes | burst cul Isughing The inscription | reads, For long service and good cone | “AMUBE" THEMSELVES, The Test In All Their Gains Is fhe Aticy | fu Pear Puln In Ialine Prisons Rorgesns Are Always Ia Demaad to Patch Up the “Players” Mario Carnra, a disciple of Cesare val anthropology, bas mads a special Atady of fhe svorts that criminals one gage in. The innocent games of child. baw, in the case of criminals, are tine. tured with crirlty and sametizes me gomyranicd by homicide the gasue wt ip op ta jumper and at bio full he ily npon the stone pave: pent, Criminals 5 uy leapfrog, but the ob the “back” gk. | rise suddenly and vio benitly just as {frog mounts and throw him to the gro Jd The eriming - play blind man's buff, tot the man + th the bandaged eyes agriew a hand rohief bearing in one tone, & piece of hand, rit or un bit of iron. With this weapon he strikes those whos he parmesx Another yo oarkable fort of this game in for the Ulinded one wo be #track by one or apc ¢ of his companions if he falls to ne © the one that touches | hing. The per vis not the innocent due of the cl Wrens game, bot & blow be vr dod inc fer a gaine in over, and | otceicnally the sufferer is disabled for i UE It bes been found in those Italian re i & wmisfories wimre prisopers are n opt in solitary confinement that pris. ere’ game are often scoompanied “thy bloodshed, and that it is almost | opomsible to prevent erneltive Thin is esially froe where prisoners work toe ner, for they secrete tools and use a8 weapons in bratal sport ‘nono of these games the player ban cach hand a stick, having Bxed in ond n keen metallic point He ia- Heaves his arcs revolving the sticks 5 rapidity, and the game is for an- ir prisoner to throes Rie head bee cen the arts and endeavor to follow revelations of the sticks without ag wounded. Iv esually happens that with & bleeding head, while sow | then mortal injuries are neeived, Sho victim in aposher game bine bis | able, with flogers spread faniike. | 4oother criminel repeatedly strikes be | ticcon the Sogers with a pointed instry- fment. I be wounds » finger, then the twa change places, and woo to the mun whe refoses the exchanges The game is dangercas, aithougle the oriminale as mrt that the wontds 0 the fingers ure the metallia points now too short gd de | oi peoetrate far, oo grim form of phil esaphy The sport of erivatanis is aoonmpaniod by clewrnc orintie craft This bs vege cial iy saben B31 100 methods fn which the | BuisComer is imitated ne prison life Tie novice is condoeted into an laipre- vied eourt chamber, where the judges are bis fellow prisaves. He br placid upon a stand and geavely tried spon a pritendied charge, aod he has bamly | been condemund when the stand fe md- | denly dewwn away, sp that he is thrown violently upon the earth. Many games necessurily imply resins aren to pain a0 an sheolate condition of sores. For example, thers is the gane of “peediea '* One of the players places Bin closed lets upon the table, holding steadily two poodles, one iu easel hand, thir points being slightly exposed. It in the game then for a companion (© steilie with his own fats those of the edber and becomes ® guestion of wadur- ston between the one who is pricked with the needles and the one whose Sets a beaten Ly the other's knvokien There ave contests in which the fin. teers and hands are deeply wanndod, add the scars are an bonorable distine- | rods sion, gaines, which sre the recreation excla- sively of criminals in prison, is the love of vombat. If, a» is held by experts’ sports are tho means of working off the superfinons sctivity of life, ie in evident prisopers, is especially powerful. It has beens noted in the case of prisoners that there is a prevalence of great agility sed litheness, which Professsr Lombroso considers a negative evidence of memal weakness, sinee it testifies to a greater development of the sotorial centers at the expense of the other serebral counters Bat usually this phyvieal ene dod in pot property used in the crdinary life of thee erinainal and fads outlet and etjoy ment in sports, Another charsoteristio of the grows of criminals 1 the admiration shown for physival fares, wanifested im the dincility with which the vanguished in sech sporms suiunit to the brutaiiiy of the victors, a thing observed among | BVI RA, Finally the insepsibility to pain ex Bibited in sports of eriminals proves timt such men are less acute in their plirwical senses ss well as loss sensitive i 16 the pains of others, sices what soos to others uselessly cruel is only the unsunl thing with criminals As the dyankard, his taste hardened by alcohol, bie need of a stimulant constantly stronger, so in the case of the criminal, the nervous system demands stimulants #0 strong that to the ordinary steady ging individual they wenid be actually painful — Pesrson’'s Weekly. Pid Xot Beam on Him, “If you chess, yuo could be the Highs thie hall * Yes?” sho said for want of anything butter to say. “Yes. But whenever I eal, you are ent 'wIndisnapolis Journal, Lombresa, the Italian expert in evimi Crimbrinly skip the rope, but part of Jeol of the gu i that he who makes af coe in Doeal connection wilh Svs #0 severe tha! a physician bas often fo receives 15 ar 18 wonmds and somes Co bandaged and places his palm apon | pot deep or severe, because, they =a | and The characteristic featur: of all these that superflnons sctivity, in the case of | tof uy life,” suid be when they met as | [THE CRUEL WAYS IN WHICH THEY |b = ivi apostolic aun av pass finnl bas bed the Charo) «! Rome asi “the missionary of nations The mmsosiite of history, the pion of art the van eaisher of the sword,” And yot he onld adden final anthoriey at all in “he dogmatic &oleleat of 8 shoveh Lith be wo dooribes and would make tv Hight of his episcopal Jineage. Bowman and Manning were peitiier of then overwhelined by the more imagh native grandeay of the chiareh’s history. But they both came to belivyn that no one generation of Christians conld rightly emancipate thernsslves from the guidance of all previous generations of Christiane on the stroogth of a new study of the Beripture de # just indfigne tion at the depth of sone of the prac tical corruptions of the church, They were in search of an antherity church of the postion and full of visi hio life and envrgy at the present ny. They thenght that thy Anglican church contd hardly claim SEFihing ike oon | tinuity with the ch ot the apiwties, and hat the Greek Hh could lwedly | claim sufficient One om of state life, or, indeod, suficient vitality and energy, to mark it oot a an institotion | af the first order of originality sind n- flacnon at the presunt day. London Spectator. He Got the gonster. He bad deposited his Hiekot in the box on the down town station of the Sixth avemae CL rood at Fifticth stron and was counting his change in a sankh tor |} plugged dises and nickels A garter fell freon his hands and rolled along the | platform until it lodged under the thisd steps which form the eilge of the plat- forms. There is luy inplain view, ut as unobtainable as the golden apples of | Hesperides, The loser ‘was the ploture of rage, “1 don’t care abont the blame eoin,”” ho wailed. “I've got ‘em to burn, but it jout makes me mad to sen that quar. ter there, and I can’t gos i” “Comme a dime, mister,” said af messenger boy, “and § cents fur ox- penses, and I'1] get yor mun.’ The man regarded the boy for » mo- | oven and ssid, “Cis ahead.’ Hoe me od in a fuw minutes with | | bis form working conviisively. In his] hand be hind a pleon of seantling The erowid watobed him curiously. From his yaouth the boy took m well inasti- ented] wad of chewing gon He stuck | this on the end of the seantling, and, thranting the stick throogh the narrow space, the soft mod sticky gum Sparks greaed the an Then he deftly | preted for the Test two ware The beds are ip the the - isan, the deposit 4 hi ine on cin Inpers of schist in inomt identionl with Parisn marble, the finest marble known, which comes rove the Winnd of Paros clos by. : Wire ave about 300 men gaged in { the triede, all of wioth have to be mar vied before hey are admitted. to the > : Nraroraity. ihe weriel is mse oo hard tobe do AL, Or even Blasted. Givent fires an lighted roused tie blooke 1] the nararal SE tracks expand with the heat and jevers ire thon inserted to pry them apart ; ‘Thin system is cootivosd until the leeks sro reduced fn ie to masses of a tabie fool or Joma, and they are then "Lippe : {an said fo bes 34,000,100 tons yet avail- ible a6 Naxos, nd last year's export wid 3,060 tons, Xt in one of the hardest substances yot Jenown, coming pext tv the dimmond, 1d mimong ite oryetalline forms known to the jewelers are the raby and the ssp phire «Pearica's Weekly. DORA EMP Ani 6 ppt Hi How Wig Ts a Cow? In the Anserican report of the com inisstoiner of wdocation for 1503-3, pub lished at Washington, there is a mest thoroaghgoing report oa “Child Stady, or, ae is ia somotioees called, “*Paidol- ogy” A bibliography of about pniime, in books and articles, shows i moeh attention has bien bastowed o the sibjeos in the United Sten Dn Htunley Hill, president of a society for thik study, tells an thus in [879 four "kinfergarteners’ in Hosten took some vhildren agide md endeavored to find out the contents of thetr minds, snd the rewnit was published in the Princeton Review for 1880, Dr. Saniey Hill mys: Thirty-five per cont of these children on r school had never seen a live chicken; 51 per cing bad never seen a robin; 5 pox cent hid tvever sen» growing straw. berry, 31 per cent of the Boston oli dren: liad never seen growing beans even in Boston, Gur school textbooks are buned: qn ovantry life, and the city di know wothing, in the large cities, of real comity life.” Here inone instance: A large perosntage of these pon being asked how showed thut they had li thooght a cow was as tail. Another s® big as her thumb dio toiknow if these young folks drew it out and presented the motley © ey its owner. “Keep the whole ontfit.™ sail the! man. “Boy, you're & peach Wo live and learn.” and he bowrded » tain, his! + face wreathed in muiles The filoe of | the boy wus similarly decorated. New # Express, York Mail and RATAN GAA « A its Wine Ostrieh, hia stock iliusteation of what » fool] will do is the habit which ostriches have of sticking the head ints the snd, lenv- ing the body exposed, but the autlior of “The Gold Diggings of Born | 1°08 sayy that thin hibit does not seem fool : mh fo one who studies the ostrich in its desirt home. Ou the contrary, it in na- | © | ture’ s wise provision for the safety of the bird io » region whiire hiding places ALS MAXON The male ostrich hatchesout the sega, | locks: after the brood, keeps his eyes opin for men, beasts ami binds, and wommuls @ Joud snorting, warning call when he sees an enemy. The brood, | when warned, fades ont of sight. Kach chick squats motionless, is bead in the sand, and its body so tear in color to that of the sand and seniit Berbage as to dooeive sven an axperienond banter ite body looks like n gray desert bush, snd the ganchow—the cowboys of the panmipas——when searching for young oe- frichos eximine avery buh within many rods of the spot where a brood disap pears, Often what seamed a bwih is found tw be in part or wholly a young entrich. With ite head ap the bird would be at onve detected. With its bead in the mind, it often escapes sven the enn eyed fox A New Sopowitia, It is suid that a new soporifle, to whit the nme peliotin bas been given, has been dissoversd in a Mexiean cactus called anhaloniom. The native Mexi- cans eat slices of the plany, which they call “peilote.”” Ite hypnotic alkaloid has been separated By Dr. Heftor of Leipaie. One grain of peilotin is qual in ite effects ts 154 grains of trional and B11 graips of hydiaje of chloral. It is uffective in quieting delirium tre wend, only in large dows. —New York Tribune onek Fire. Creek five, wiideh hat several thee parnes-—-wild fire, Higuid firs, wet five and fire ralg--doscriptive of ite destroo. tiveness; is said to bave been the most destructive engine of war previous to gunpowder, Discovered by Callinioas, a Syrian, it was fist uss in the slog of Constantinople, 673-5, and at Meooa, 940, Liternily Correvl. Lipper — How wonderfully cheap clothing is getting w be! Trousers have come down one-half. . Chipper—Yes, just a 2 halt. Since this bicycle craze thwy only tome down to the knees — Richmond Dis patch, In 1842 a fire broke out in Hamburg which soun passed beyond the cobtrol of the firemen, consamid a large por- tion of the business quarter of the town | and occasioned a loss of $35,000,000, wo Hindoo chronology extends to 174 BC; Babylon 6108 B. C. ; Chinn, or B. Cc. rian Cid Johnnie O'Gixoat ‘was made Stor at the dispate. He promised igs hin with » door and a window | and a round table in the center pac, no that the head of each af the O’Grosts might enter dose and then sit st 8 table practically asd sctoally w “hed. John O'Giroat’s house became the best known building in Great Brit. sin. Is site is now marked only by sane grass covered monnds —8t Louis Hepublio. Awnings Over the Streets In Seville The busicat streets and squares are kept onal and dim ander awnings On the whols, I think it was these awnings that made Seville so charming in Ag gust. There had been a few in Cordova. I have been to more than ane town which rab a similar protection against Fraveneal sunlight, but I have never Sime moross them when they wire ae slaborute, as general and as effecting ak in Seville. In the Barrow streets thefiedl siretched from houseton (0 houselop at H gk ! Hi i i + | mach end, dropping mo great inclosing wail of canes so Jow as just to escape tae heads of the high suddied horsemen wiki prapoed ander them. lo the large spares they extended in a cheokorboard arrsogemens, with intricate ropes ‘snd pulleys whieh I never ied 0 ander stand, content th enjoy the remit of tilack shalbws alternating with greats splotches of suniight,. Even the town ball spread out an swniog all series the Cwdde sidewalk in fron of ib aud pot a bot ar bank or palace or big house did we enter that hind por ite courts as well protected. — Elisabeth Ro Poapell in Century. Bow It Happened. “Tou bad about Shelby, wasn't it? “What's the matter with hun?’ “He bad a terrible shock day before yesterday and may not recover. Hadn't yim hoard about #2! “Na. How did it happen?’ “Wail, be had an engagement to meet his wife at a certain place down town al 12:30 o'clock.” 8 You EE “And he hurried ap with his work wad started emt for the rendezvous,’ SY om tt “He got thers at exactly the appoint. el time, “1 sea. Wall? “His wile had been there 13 seo ands Cleveland Leader, #