Ourtious Mexican Laws, They have some ve. curious crim) pal laws In Mexico. ‘or Instance, it Ie twice as much of an offense to wnti late the face of a woman as that of ¢ man. The law scoms to be based op the idea that a woman's best posse, sion is her beauty and that to mar ir does her a govt lajury There is anoticr curious law, “If » person shou! wounded in an ep eounter, the punishment to the offend er is fixed by the number of days his wictim Las to stay In the hospital or under a doctor's care. A line Is fixed at 40 days in the way of a general divi plon. If the injured man occupies more than 40 days in his recovery, the pen alty doubles up. An Impudent Fraud, An impudent fraud was perpetrated apon a Manchester bank by one of ite eustomers, who opened an account with some few hundreds of pounds. The man, after a few weeks, drew two checks, each within a pound or so of his balance, and, selecting a busy day, presented himself at one end of the pounter, while an accomplice, when he sew that bis friend's check had been cashed, immediately presented his own to a cashier at the other end. Both pe hs | Queen Cather ne obtained pins fro: France, and, in 1548, an act was pass ed: “That no person shall put to sal any pinnes but only such us shall he double icaded aad have the heads sold ered fast to the shank of the pinnes well smoothed, he shank well shapen, the points well round tiled, cautul and sharpened.” At this tine 1108t pins were nu brass, but maiy were also wen, with a brs ss surface. France sent a large number of pins to England until about the year 1626, {n thig year one John Tilsby started pina 2 king in Gloucestershire, So sue cessful was Ws venture that he soon had 1.500 persons working. These ping made at Stroud were held in high re pute. In 1636 pmmakers combined ané tounded a corporation. The industry was carried on at Bristol and Birming bam, the litter becoming the chief center, In 1775 prizes were offered for the first native made pins and needles in Carolina, and during the war in 1812 pins fetched enormous prices. Pins vary from 3% inches in length t the smull gilt entomologists’ pin; £,500 weighing about an ounce.—~Good | Words. cashiers referred the checks to the | ledger clerk, who, thinking the same | eashier had asked him twice, said | #right” to both checks. The thieves | A Lueid Decision, A correspondent, referring to a recent article in Law Notes on “The Gram- mar of the Courts,” calls attention to THE PATTON COURIER, NOVEMBER 9. 1996 HE WON IN A CANTER. LUCKY" BALDWIN MADE {ISJOCKEY RIDE SQUARE The Horseman Used an Avpgnment That Made the Crooked Rider's Teeth Chatter While He Got Om All the Speed In the Animal, mace of | | In the lobby of a hotel the other evening a number of men were discuss. | | | somewhere | He was not utterly demoralized | there tng sports and sporting men when the | subject of nerve and grit came up. One of the party, a well known Californian, who knew “Lucky” Baldwin in the old days id: “Baldwin was about the hardest man to be chiseled out of anything he set his heart on getting that I ever met up with. put it on him in business and other sort A whole lot of people tried to | of deals, but none of these ever suc- | ceeded in catching ‘Lucky’ Baldwin sufficiently asleep to make thelr plans stick. THERE WASN'T ANY ROW It Was Simply a Case of Spontanes ous Combustion, He was a very young man, amos! too young to be out on the street at that time of the night, 8:30 p. m., and his generad appearance indicated that he had been picked up by a cyclone during his meanderings but was something in his manner that would lead the close observer to the conclusion that all had not beer well with him. “Gee!” he exclaimed as he spue around the corner and went bump inte 8 policeman, i" lo,” ejaculated that worthy, in stinctively grabbing at him; “what's the row?" “There wasn't any,” responded the youth. “What are you running like that tor?” persisted the policeman. “I've just been up against a case of | spontaneous combustion.” “Horsemen still talk about a funny | game of the Chicago race tracks a number of years ago. magnificent string in which Baldwin figured on one | Baldwin had brought his | of thoroughbreds to | see her. Chicago to make an effort to annex the | swell stakes that were then on tap on | the tracks in the windy town, and he got them home first or ia the money in | 7 many of the biggest events. Well, he were never eaugnt | “Ihe Devil's Tn: nip Pateh” On the top of Bald Eagle mountain, Just where the old turnpike breaks over the brow down into Black Hole vailey, is a queer field of rock, which years ago was christened “The Devil's Turnip Patch.” The rocks, which are of a reddish sandstone, have a striking peculiarity of ail standing on end, thus forming a jagged, irregular surface, | that won for it its queer name from the early settlers. In bygone days, when the stages wheeled their way up from Northum- berland to Williamsport, the four in hands traversed the old pike that skirts the turnip patch, and the strange gar den of rocks was a constant Source of wonderment to the traveler. Added to its interest as a natural curiosity is a hidden stream of water somewhere beneath the standing stones, the noisy flowing of which forms a romantic gong beneath one's feet. Nobody knowsswhere the source of this stream fs, nor can anybody find where it emp- ties itself into Black Hole valley. the following lucid decision of Sir | John Taylor Coleridge in the case of Turley against Thomas, 8 C. and P. 103. 34 E. C. L. 312: “It has been sug: gested as a doubt by the learned coun- gel for the defendant whether the rule of the road applies to saddle horses or only to carriages. Now I have no doubt that it does.”—Law Notes. | -— An Accident. Little Bessie having been punished for misbehavior, slunk to the other end of the room. crying. Her mother turn- ed to view her repentance, but found ter engaged in making faces at her. “Why, Bessie” said her mother, “how can you do so?” “Oh, mamma,” answered the little girl, “1 was trying to smile at you, but ny face slipped.”—London Answers. | still Free, | After two solid hours of moon'ight and uninterruption she thought she had him. “I admit that you are the sweetest” — | “Yes, go on,” she whispered. | “But the doctor has forbidden me The rock field covers an area of two | ts.” he added or three acres, with its widest part to sweets," Le acded. the north, then narrowing down V | shaped to the south rowing the angle | aind a cloud.—Philadelphia Record. fs lost in a fringe of stunted hemlocks | and elders. Theorists have figured on | the causé of this mountain freak, but | is in the state that our earth was 34. the theory obtaining most credence 1s | 000,000 years ago. Those who can re that it 1s a legacy of the glacial age, | member back 34,000,000 years will un the rocks being a collection pushed | Serstand what this means. into their present vertical position by the moving ice.—Philadelphia Record. An astronomer declares that Jupiter A man ean walk a mile ‘ vithout mov. | 1 And the sensitive moon retired be- | They Changed. ’ At a dinner party the osper day well known and deservedly popular dramatist took a lady down to dinnet, | peither kmowing who the other was. As a subject the theater was started, as it is so often under similar circum- | stances. “I can’t think why they have reviv- ed that piece at the King's,” the lady | said. “I never liked it, and it's so worn that I should have done better than that?” “Yes,” the dramatist replied, “‘per- | haps so. It was one of my first pieces, however, and I had not had much ex. perience when I wrote it. Let’s change the subject.” The lady was quite ready to do so and wished, no doubt, that she had known who her neighbor was. He presently said: “Are yov interested in the Fenton case?’ speaking of a cause celebre that was in progress. “Yes. I’ve read all the evidence,” was the reply. “He'll lose it, of course,” the drama- tist went on. “He never could have had the faintest chance from the first. It’s a marvel to me how any lawyer could have been idiot snough to allow such a case to go into court!” “Well,” answered the lady quietly, “my husband was the idiot. Iets shange tlre subject.” The Wrong Text, “Very few good specches are really mprompty,’” said a New Orleans law- yer, who has a reputation as a clever offhand talker, “but it is generally easy to produce that effect by simply ‘leading off with some strictly local al- Jusion. Of course that's a trick, but It's a trick employed by a good many eminent orators. I was broken of it myself by rather a peculiar incident. “Ope day some years ago I happened #0 be in a town where a large commer- | pial college is located and was invited by the president to make a few re. marks to the boys during the noon re- cess. on the subject of energy, and as 1 was going into the main hall I chanced to notice the word ‘Tush’ in big letters on | the outside of the door. ‘By Jove,” 1 said to myself, ‘that’s the very thing I] need for localizing my opening sen- tence! So when I reached the platform | » I launched out something like this: “ ‘My young friends, as I approached the entrance to this room a moment ago 1 observed a word on the panel of the door that impressed me as being an | appropriate emblem for an institution of this eminently practical character. | It expressed the one thing most useful to the average man when he steps into the arena of everyday life. It was’ «pull? yelled a dozen of the boys on the back seats. There was a roar of laughter, and I was so horribly discon certed that 1 was unable to take up the thread of my remarks. The con- founded door had ‘Push’ om one side and ‘Pull’ on the gther. I had taken my text from tvTODZ side.” -~New Orleans Times erat I mentally framed a little talk | no mora than a ceunle of feet—Chica BEAUTIES OF A GLACIER. | Scenes That Are Likened to Visions of a Glorified City. The fascinations of a glacier are as witching as they are dangerous. Apos- tolic vision of a crystal city glorified | by light “that never was on land or sea” was not more beautiful than | these vast ice rivers, whose onward course is chronicled, not by years and centuries, but by geological ages, says | a British Columbia correspondent of the New York Post. With white dom- { ea show’ coruices wreathed fantastic as arabesque and with the glassy walls of emerald grotto retiecting a willion sparkling jewels, one might be in some cavernous dream world or among the tottering grandetc of an an- cient city. The ice pillars and silvered pinnacles, which scientists call seracs, stand like the sculptured marble of temples crumbling to ruin. Glittering pendants hang from the rim of bluish chasm. Tints too brilliant for &rtists’ brush gleam from the turquoise of crystal! walls. Rivers that flow tarough valleys of ice and lakes, hemmed in by hills of ice, shine witk an azuce depth that is very infinity’'s self. In the morning, when all thaw has been stopped by the night's cold, there is deathly silence over the glacial fields, aven the mountain cataracts fall noise: tessly from the precipice to ledge in tenuous, wind blown threads. But with the rising of the sun the whole glacial world bursts to life im noisy tumult Surface rivnlets brawl over the ice with a glee that is vocal and almost human. The gurgle of rivers flowing through subterranean tunnels becomes « roar, as of a rushing, angry sea, ice grip no longer holds back rock scree | loosened by the night's frost, and there is the reverberating thunder of the falling avalanche Sod a “The office ot the state autliurities is an impartial one. The state troops are sent to the scene of disturbance for the | sole purpose of protecting life and property and preserving order when the county authorities are unable to | cope with the difficulty. The owner of a mine claims the right to stop work at any time. The miner claims the right to stop work at any time, if cap- ftal can shut down. labor. can shut | down. If capital can strike, labor cas strike. No greater right is cla 2d 1 | one than for that for the other and ne right can be withheld from one that ‘is not conceded to the other But neither has the right to® resort to public violence. No one, under any efrcumstances, has a right to con: Plocaaiiy. One of London's most famous streets ia Plcecadilly, which consists of shops the ruffs, or “pickadills,” worn by the and fashionable dwelling houses. The name is said to have been derived from gallants of James 1 and Charles I, the stiffened points of which resembled spear heads or pickadills. Some years before the introduction of these collars however. “Piccadille” is rceferred to, | and it is surmised that the collar may | have been so called from being worm | by the frequenters of Piccadilla House | had one of his finest horses entered in | a valuable long distance event, and Baldwin was particularly anxious to | win this race, not so much for the purse end of it as for the glory of cap- «uring the stake. His horse just about | figured to win, too and Baldwin in- | tended to ‘go down the line’ on the ani- | mal's chances, not only at the track, erably more than $100,000 on the horse if the brute got under the wire first. | Baldwin's regular stable jockey was | taken sick on the morning of the race, | and the old man had to hustle around | for another boy to ride his horse in the | big event. From another horseman he | bought for a big round sum the release of a high grade rider, who was to have | taken the mount on a thoroughbred | that didn’t figure to get near the money | In the stake race. jockey his instructions as to the way | he wanted the horse ridden, and then, | when the betting opened, his commis | sloners dum sed Baldwin’s money inte | the ring in such large quantities that the horse became an overwhelming fa- vorite. “A quarter of an hour before the | its tercentenary, and crowds of vis horses were due to go to the post a well known bookmaker, to whom Bald- win nad often exhibited kindness im less prosperous days, ran to where the old man was standing, chewing a straw, in his barn. « ‘Baldwin,’ said the bookie to the! old man, ‘there’s a job to beat you, and | you're going to get beat. They wanted me to go in with ‘em, but you've al- | ways been on the level with me, and I wouldn’t stand for it. The ring had | bought up your jock, and your Lorse 1s going to be snatched.’ “ ‘Much obliged for telling me that,’ replied the old man. ‘I'll just make a stab to see that tne boy doesn’t do any snatching, though.’ { “Baldwin borrowed another gun | rom one of his stable hards (in those | | days he always carried one of his own | about as long as your arm), and with | his artillery he strolled over the infield | and took up his stand by the fence i at the turn into the stretch. He hadn't | mentioned to anybody what he was go- | Ing to do, and the folks who saw the {old man making for the stretch turn | simply thought that Baldwin wanted | to watch the race from thar point of | view. IIe did, for that matter, but he | happened to have another end in view “Well, the horses got away from the Baldwin gave the | post in an even bunch, and then Bald- | win's horse went out te make the run- ping. The jockey's idea was to race the horse's head off and then pull him in the stretch, making it appear as if the animal had tired. Baldwin had instructed the jock to play a waiting game and make his bid toward the fin- fsh. The horse simply ou‘classed his company. however, and he 4 n't show any indications of leg weariness what ever as he rou:ded the backstretch on the rail a couple of lengths in front of his field. Baldwin could see, however, that ‘he crooked jock was sawing the horse’s head off in his effort to take | him back to the ruck. When the horses were still a hundred feet frem him, Baldwin let out n yell to attract hig jockey's attentien, and then he flashed his two guns in the sunlight and baw ed at the jock: “ ‘Laggo that horse's head, you mon- key devil, and go on and win or ru ghoot you so full of holes that you won't hold molasses! “The jock gave one look at those two guns that Baldwin was pointing straight at him. Then he gave Bald: win’s horse his head, sat down to rida for al) that was in him, and the horse under him cantered in ten lengths to the good on the bit. As long as ‘Lucky’ Baldwin was on the eastern turf after of his horses.”—Washington Post. The Right Word, ished artist?” profession. be’s finished. ~Chiaon Post. «| The Point of View. The squire very sorry to bear that your husband but you must try and be cheerful, as you know it will ve all for the best. Mrs. Hodge— Ah, yes, indeed, sir; it'll be a blessing when ’'e’s gone. I'll be able to live in comfort then, as I ’ave ’im in four different clubs.— Judy. : (sympathetically)—I'm | that no jockey ever tried to yank one “You look too green to burn.” hue kled the bluecqat. “It’s on me, just the same. My gin lives around the corner, and I went to I thought it was all”— “Where does the combustion coms in?” interrupted the officer. “Come out, you mean,” corrected the youth. “Come off!” exclaimed the officer. “Tell me what the row is before ¥ ehase you.” “Well, that's what I’m trying to do,* pleaded the boy. “The girl’s old man and I don’t harmonize a little bit, and when he met me at the door he fired me so suddenly that I had vertigo. if | you don’t call that spontaneous com: bustion, what the dickens do you call | but at all of the big poolrooms in the | it?’ | country. He stood to clean up consid: | | iceman, “you run along home and get “Qh, excuse me,” apologized the po into your trundle bed!” and the biue- soat gently wafted the remnant on its | av Nutrait Froe Press tKISH TURNS AND TWISTS. The Unconscious Humor That Crop Out In the Green Isle, The author of “Irish Life and Char geter” says truly that one has only | to mix with an Irish crowd to hear many a laughable expression, quite in nocently uttered. As the Duke and Duchess of York were leaving Dublin In 1897, amid enthusiastic cheering, an old woman remarked: “Ah! Isn't it the fine receptior they're gettin, goin away?” 1n 1892 Dublin university celebrated itors were attracted to the city. Twa laborers, rejoiced at the general pros perity, expressed their feelings. “Well, Tim,” said one, ‘“thim tar cintinaries does a dale for the thrade of Dublin, and no mistake.” “Oh faix they do!” sald the other. “And whin, with the blessia of God, we get home rule, sure we can Lave as manny of thim as we piase.” An old woman, seeing a man pulling a young calf roughly along the road, exclaimed: “Qh, you bla’guard! That's no way to thrate a fellow crather.” i “Sure,” said a laborer'to a young | lady who was urging him to send his children te school, “I ' do anything for such a sweet, gintlemanly lady as yourself.” Again, the laborers on a large estate decided that it would be more ton: venient for them if they could be paid every week instead of every fortnight | One of their number was sent to placs | their proposition before the land agent | and this was hig statement: “If you please, sir, it's me flesire and it is also .very other man’s desire, tht¢ we resave out fortnight's pay {very week.” An exasperated sergeant, drilling a squad of recruits, called to them at ast: “Halt! Just come over here, all of It's a fine | ye, and look at yourselves. me ne’re btoarvin fan’ 4% | King Richard In » Fitcien | #Actors of the old school did mov | nave the gorgeous stage settings of the | present,” said a veteran stage manager | the other night as he gazed at the stage | In Iord’s Opera House while in & reminiscent mood. “I remember once | we were playing southern towns with | Edwin Booth and wanted to put on ‘Richard II” No special scenery was earried for this, and I was told to look wver the stock at the theater to see if there was any that could be used. The second scene called for the en trance of the izing and ail his couriers | ‘nto a voyal hall. I picked out a set of scenery that I thought would do for the palace, but cautioned the stage hands not to get it on wrong side out. | Well, the first scene was finished, and | when the stage was disclosed for the | second there was the typical old Kiteh- en scene, the one with hams hanging | from the rafters, a candlestick on the | mantel and all that. I was horrified | and snked Mr. Booth if we should | change it by ringing down the curtain He said no, he would go on, but he | sautioned the other players to ‘keep your eyes on me; don’t under any con- sideration look behind you at the sce | ery.’ | | “Well, the scene went off, and after | | ward, when I asked some of those in | “Why do you speak of him as a fin | the front of the house, they made nc | | comment, and T was convinced that in | | | | “Because he told me he was utterly | the intensity of the acting they had not | discouraged and was going to quit the | noticed that the If that doesn’t show that | en instead of the palace’ —Baltimore I don’t know what does.” Sun. king was in the kitch- | | | recular musical Instrument. A peculiar musical instrument 18 | used by the Moros. It consists of a | {s at the point of death. Mrs. Hodge | hoop of bamboo, upon which are hung i by strings a number of thin pieces of mother of pearl. When struck with a | small reed, these give forth a sweet, tinkling sound, a combination of which sounds is developed into a weird, monotonous fantasy, very pleas- ant tH the ear—for a short time. ~ADUGL & A0ZEN years AKO, AS oeariy | | as 1 remember, this young man went | | on a visit to a relative in a neighbor | ing city, and one afternoon, on the third or fourth day of his stay, he startled a lady member of the house hold by remarking that he ‘had a feel Ing’ that some misfortune had over taken a wealthy planter whom they both knew very well, and whom I wil eall Colonel Jones, The colonel was & prominent resident of the doctor's home town and had a large outlying estate, which he was in the habit of visiting once a week, “On the day of Smith's singular pr. monition he wa I" those tours of inspection, but tailed 10 come ba and the fol i mori his corp was found iviug in a corufield. He | had evide: about 24 hours, and irom thy uppe nce of thy body seemed to have hoon seized with some sort of Gc or convulsion. “Of course the affair created a great stir, and the police made a pretty thorough investigation, but the only thing they found that merited any special attention was a small, round | vial in the dead man’s vest pocket. It was about the diameter of a lead pen- ell by four inches long, and had orig- nally contained a couple of dozen 85 on e been dread | medicinal tablets, which, lying one on top of the other, filled the little bottle to the cork. A few still vemained in the bottom. “Upon inquiry It was learned with: | out trouble that the tablets were # | harmless preparation of soda, and tbat | Jones himself had bought them at a | local drug store. That ended suspicion | in that quarter, and, for lack of any- thing better, the coroner returned s | verdict of death from | There was no autopsy. | “Some time after Jones had been buried,” continued the police commis gioner, “I learned accidentally of Dr. | Smith's curious prophecy, and it set me to thinking. Eventually I evolved | & theory, but it was impossible at the sunstroke. | time to sustain it with proof, and for | | ive or six years I kept it pigeonholed tn my brain, waiting for something to happen. Meanwhile, to everybody's surprise, Dr. Smith went to the dogs. He began by drinking heavily, grad | ually lost his practice, and finally | skipped out to avold prosecution for cashing a fake draft. After his flight I learned enough to absolutely confirm my theory as to Jones’ death. What aad really happened was this: siderable sum of money and had given a note, upon which he had forged his | father’s name as indorser. The plant- ! “Dr. Smith owed the old man a con-.| | ARMORED COFFINS. men They Were Once Used In nu Churele yard In Scotland, 3 In the earlier half of the nineteenth century the practice of stealing bodies from the churchyards for the purpose of sale as subjects for dissection, which was known as “body snatching,” was for a time very rife Varions plans were made to defeat the nefarious and sacrilegious proceeds {ngs of the “body snatchers,” or “resus rectionists,” as they were sometimes called, a very common one being the sroction of two or more small watchs houses whose windows communded the whole burying ground, and In which the friends of the deceased mounted guard for a number of nights after the funeral. A usual method of the grave robbers was to dig down to the head of the cofiin and bore in it a large round hole by means of a specially constructed center bit. It was to counteract this maneuver that the two curious coffins fike relics now lying on either side of the door of the ruined church of Aber, fosle, in Perthshire, were constructed. They are solid masses of cast iron of enormous weight. When an interment took place one of these massive slabs was lowered by suitable derricks, tackles and chain on to the top of the coffin, the grav was filled in, and there it was left f some considerable time. Later on tb grave was opened and the iron armo plate was removed and laid aside ready for another funeral. / These contrivances still lie on the grass of the lonely little churchyard, objects of curiosity to the passing cy: eiist and tourist.—Scientific American The Explanation. One morning the readers of a certaln newspaper were perplexed to see in type the announcement that “the Sco tus handed down an important deel sion yesterday.” The afternoon papel of the town, with which the morning paper for years had held a bitter con- troversy, interesting nome but them- selves, laughed that day, as the poets say, “in ghoulish glee,” and it was up to the morning paper the next day to axplain that “the types” made them say that the Scotus did so and so when the telegraph editor should have known that that word was merely the abbre- viation of the telegrapher for suprems court of the United States. Loevusts Good to Eat, All native African races eat locusts With many it takes, and has to take, the place of the British workman's er was pressing him for payment and | beef and mutton. In a good many vil- had threatened suit, which meant it | lages sun dried locusts are an article of evitable exposure. One day, they were conversing, Jones pulled out a little glass vial and swallowed one | while | commerce. The Sudanese are particu- larly fond of them. Before they are eaten they are toast. of the tablets it contained, remarking ed. The wings and legs having first that he took one daily, after dinner. | been torn off, the long, soft body and for sour stomach. “That suggested a diabolical scheme | ceeded to put into execution. tablet of strychnine, and, encountering the colonel next day, asked him to let him have the vial for a moment, so he | the crisp »ead form the delicacy. 1 determined not to let my European of assassination, which the doctor pro- | prejudices influence me, but to give Repair | the dish of grilled locusts a fair trial, Ing to his office, he made up a duplicate | I thought how John the Baptist had enjoyed them plus wild honey. The one 1 was eating was rathes pice. I agreed with my Arab servant could copy the address of the makers | that, should the meat supply fall short, from the label ly, and while his attention was briefly diverted elsewhere Smith put in the prepared tablet. He placed it under “Jones handed it over unsuspecting { | | the top four. thus making it reason- ably certain that his victim would take it on the fifth day from that date. Next morning he left town, so as ts be far away when the tragedy was | consummated. and some mysterious uncontrollable impulse evidently lec aim to make the prediction that first | excited my suspicion “When | made certain of all this, 1 tocated Smith in Oklaboma and wus on the point of applying for an extradi tion warrant when he anticipated me »y contracting pneumonia and dying 1 thereupon returned the case mental pigeonhole, where it has re mained ever since.” “Pardon ine for asking,” said one of story. or are you entertaining us with Interesting fiction?” to its’ | behind you. | a dish of locusts would be a very good substitute. By the time I was eating the seo ond locust it seemed to me absurd why one should have a sort of lurking pity for John the Baptist’s daily menu unless it. be for its mcnotony, and 1 felt convinced that I should get tired of honey sooner than I should of lov custs.~Current Literature. An eccentric clergyman inf Cornwan had been much annoyed bythe way the members of the congregdtion had of looking around to see late comers. After enduring it for some e he said on entering the reading disk one day: “Brethren, I regret to. sd that your attention is called away} from your religious duties by you vely natural desire to see who co; in 1 propose henceforth to | save you the trouble by naming each the listeners. “but is that really a true | person who may come late.” He then began, “Dearly opeloved,” | but paused half way to interpolate. “It is absolutely true,” replied the | aarrator. “But how did you learn the particu: ars?’ “Well,” said the police commissioner smiling, “Smith was like most clever epiminals--he had one weak spot, He “Mr. S., with his wife and daughter.” Mr. 8S. looked rather surprised, but the minister, with perfect gravity, re- sumed. Presently he again paused. | “Mr. C. and William D.” was fool enough to tell a woman. She plabbed.”—New Orleans Times-Demo- | erat. Sach Great In Ais Own Way. fighter. During his triumphal tour aft- er he had downed Corbett the great gladiator was in Washington called at the state department. | some newcomer. The abashed congregation kept thelr eyes studiously bent on their books. The service proceeded in the most or derly manner, the parson interrupting himself every now and then to name At last he said, stil | with the same perfect gravity: They tell a story about John Sher. | ] 2 y man and Bob Fitzsimmons, the prize- | “Mrs. S. in a new bonnet.” In a moment every feminine head im | the congregation had turned around.— and | Then | was seen a contest between brain and | brawn, head and hands. Fitzsimmons looked sheepish and ill at ease, but Mr. Sherman evidently tried to make him feel at home. “Your recent contest was a severe one, I believe, Mr. Fitzsimmons?” he said. Mr. Fitzsimmons uttered a couple of | tnaudible words and grinned. “It seemed to have pretty thorough: ly aroused the country, the rontest, did it not?” Mr. Fitzsimmons scrutinized the brim of his hat attentively, blushed, grinned and said: “The United States is a fine country, your honor,” and backed out of the office, responding with short, sharp ducks of the head to the secretary of state's farewell bows. When the doors had closed upon the then world’s cham- pion, the wrinkles at the sides of Mr. Shermau's eyes contracted into a smile. “A great man that, Babcock,” be said dryly to his secretary, and went | | on with his work.~Cincinnati Commer | «ial Tribune. Millinery Trade Review. A Mystery of the Sea, One of the most curious finds ever made from the sea was that which came to the Azores in 1858. The is- land of Corvo was then in the posses: gion of two runaway British sailors, One morning there drifted ashore a eraft which had evidently been frozen In the ice for a long time. It was an ancient and battered brig, without masts, bulwark or name, but the hatches were on, the cabin doors fast, and the hull was buoyant. She had lit- tle cargo, and that consisted of skins, and furs in prime condition. No papers were found in the cabin but it was figured that she was 2 gealer or trader, carrying a crew ot 10 or 12, and that she had been pro- visicned for a year. The spoiled, but ‘the beef was perfectly preserved. She had heen abandoned when frozen in an iceberg and drifted for gears. I'he date of the letter found in the forecastle showed that the brig had been abandoned nearly half a century before. The two sailors got out th¢ furs, which eventually brought them $4,000, and two barrels of beef and then set fire to the wreck. No trace. was ever found of its name or owners flour was - -deavori New Y He clair ial offic ary, 190 _ receive vices du position propose railroad tion by | * him in John He ensburg for the | James ‘brought recover alleged | ander B aintiffi hile ta ickety | [Knissel bridge g to a di prs $300 have it bridge. Ww. L. county, | 8 wareh J compan) ho and that been pai and he h Somerse Johnstoy ~ the brew ticle of ¢ | Tie. Patt § One'of went ti the Inter and it is to last ye It contai and some leagues. Howar pt State which we ate in Mitinger Hoes not hough h place. Mitingy p Xin, Awney