AFTER THE BALL. BY EMJLIE CLARK. ftfiig back the curtain and let In the light, Strains of sweet music are floating to-night On the breath of balm-breathing air ; The light-hearted dancers in circles go by, With ablush on the cheek and a Halle in the For bravery and beauty are there Fljng back the curtain, and onco again gaze On the old scenes—the wearisome days— The sunshine, tho shadow and rain. Are there apples of Kodoin whose ashes still cling, Crushed roses whoso thorns still festering sting, That gossip and sport with the brain? Fling back the curtain—re-enact the old play, The hopes and the fears; have you nothing to say? No sentence or act to recall?— Nothing that brings you a pang of regret— Nothing you would not be glad to forget, And never know after the ball? . The haunts we so loved, are thoy murmuring still In their dark robes of green—the clear singing rill At the foot of the spicy birch tree? Do the choir in the wildwood singgayly as when We wandered together in that love-haunted glen And praised their rare minstrelsy? Could my steps but keep pace with tho wings of my mind, I would'leave this fair land aud its treasures behind And roam over meadow and wold; The hill-side and valley again I'd retrace. Your true hand to lead, I would visit each place We loved once so fondly of old. Fling back the curtain and let in the light. This is a scene that is sacred to-night, And yearly its bliss 1 recall; And while youth is treading its light mazes through I'll linger a moment, beloved, with you, In memory of "After the Ball" And now when life's giddy waltzes are done, When the lights are all out and the dancers aro Wit?) the pleasures that come at our call, Will you sit in your cozy arm chair and repeat | The low whispered words so wonderous sweet, The parting just after tho ball? ANITA, lowa, A CHEROKEE POET. Tempestuous Life of a Civilized and Educated Red Man. H E subject oi f~T this sketch was born in the Cher |k] s okee country, on WJSfe the Oos-te-nah ly River, at what <5 .is now the flour .—vAfe,r"l inhing city o i Rome. Ga., on March 19, 1827. His father, Gen. John Ridge, a full-blood Indian, was the popular chief of the powerful Cherokee tribe. His mother, a highly educated lady, was the daughter of Judge Northrup, of Connecticut. The family moved with the tribe to the present Cherokee res ervation in the Indian Territory in J837. Dissension soon arose among the tribe, because of their enforced re tnoval from the home of their fathers, which were cunningly fomented by John Ross, a rival chieftain, who was jealous of the popularity and power of Chief Ridge, which finally culminated on June 30, 1839, iu the cold-hlooded murder of General Ridge aud his aged father, in the presence of the family, by the adherents of Ross, who seized the supreme power, nnd remained chief until about the close of the late civil war between the States, when he died. "Yellow-Bird," then a boy of 12 years of age, an eyewitness to this atrocious piurder, in a letter thus describes tho Incident: "The removal of the Indians West had fomented discontents of the darkest and deadliest nature. The ignorant Indi ans, unable to vent their rage upon the whites, turned their wrath towards their own chiefs, and chose to hold them responsible for what had happen ed. John Boss made use of these prejudices to establish his own power. He held a sccrot coun sel and plotted the death of my father and grandfather, Iva-nun-ta kla-ge and Boudinot and others who were friendly to those men. These fcloody deeds were perpetrated un der circumstances of peculiar aggrava tion. "On the morning of June 22, 1839, about daybreak, our family was aroused from sleep by a violent noise; the doors H ere broken down and the house was filled with armed men. I saw my father in the hands of assassins. He endeavored to speak to them, but they Shouted and drowned his voice, for they were ordered not to listen to him for a moment, for fear they might be persuaded not to kill him. They dragged him into the yard and pre pared to murder him. Two strong Men held him by the arms, while oth ers stabbed him deliberately with long dirk knives twenty-nine times. My mother rushed to the door, but they pushed her back into fhe house with their guns, and prevented her egress until the act was finished. My father foil |o the earth, but did not expire for a few minutes. My mother ran out to him. He raised himself on his elbow pod tried to speak, but the blood llow jd into his mouth and prevented him. a few brief moments he died, with- | frut speaking the last word which he iwished to sav. Then succeeded a scene pf agony, the sight of which makes one fegret that the human race had ever been created. It lias darkened my life jprith an eternal shadow. In a room prepared for the purpose lay pale in death the man whose voice had been listened to with awe and admiration in the councils of his nation, and whose i fame as an orator, a statesman and a ! fcoldier had passed to the remotest of the United States, the blood oozing through his winding-sheet and falling, drop by drop, to the tloor. By his side oat my stricken mother, with her hands clasped, and in speechless agony—she *vho had given him her heart in her youth and beauty, and, leaving her parents, had followed the husband of her choice from her home of frealtli and culture to a wild and dis tant land; and bending over him was \I\H own afflicted mother, with her long white hair flowing loose over her shoulders and bosom, crying to the Great Spirit to sustain her in that oreadful hour; and in addition to all these—the wife, the mother, and the little children, who scarcely knew Jheir loss— were the dark faces of those who had been privy to the assassina tion, who had come to smile over the terrible scene." John liollin llidge, or Chees-quat alaw-ne, his Indian name (signifying * Yellow Bird";, was educated at Fay etteviile, Ark., and graduated with distinguished honors at Groat Bar rington, Mass. He was first cousin to the gallant Colonel E. C. Boudinot, so well known to the people of Texas as the leader of a regiment of Indians in the Confederate army, and who has been for years the representative of his people at the national capital. At the breaking out of the Califor nia gold fever, in 1849, Yellow Bird emigrated to that country, and en gaged in placer mining in Shasta County, where this writer, then a,small boy, learned to love ancr lionor him for hia manly virtues, his kindly svm patliy, and brilliant intellect. His idle moments were devoted to the muses, and his numerous poems (I now have them in book form), published in the provincial papers of that day, were extensively reproduced in the literary journals of the country, and met with distinguished popular favor. Gifted with a commanding physique, irresist ible personal magnetism, and a classi cal education, combined with an ex ceptional wealth of imagery and flu ency of language, ho became one of the most popular writers of the day. He was a vigorous and incisive political writer, and edited with marked ability one of the leading daily journals of the State; but his devotion to the arts and sciences and the higher branches of literature disinclined him to engage permanently in the partisan warfare which prevailed in California in the early years following its admis sion into the Federal Union. Some oi his fugitive pieces possessed such re markable literary merit as to attract the attention of the profoundest think ers and ablest writers of the age. A few years since, while our poet was visiting the national capital, whera his genius was recognized and greatly admired, Miss Vinnie Beam (now Mrs. Hoxie), a lady known to fame for her genius as a sculptress, and whose cunning hand created from cold mar ble some of the most beautiful statu ary which now adorns the most stately capitol of the world, requested Yellow Bird to write her a little Indian love song. Without preparation or thought, on the impulse of the mo ment, he wrote this little gam, which has been set to music, ana be come one ol the most popular melo dies at the capital: J LOVE THEE. I love thoe as the soaring bird The bright, blue morning When he sings; In circling, circling melodies, With heaven's sweet sunlight On his vings. I love thee as the billows lore In tropic lands the Pearly shore; They come and go. they come ani ga, With answering kisses' Evermore. I love thee as the mariner, Far driven o'er the Stormy sea, The bright and silver rising star, Which tells him where his Home may be. I love thee, ever, ever shall, Thine eyes, their bright and Glorious light Dwell in my soul fore verm ore, Illumining its Deeps of night. Geobge F. Alford. Shipped for One Trip. One day in early spring of the yeai 1888, the revenue cutter Andrew Johnson steamed into the harbor of Frankfort, a little town in the northern part of Michigan, nnd mado fast to tha dock. The vessel was to he painted, and for several days "all hands" were busily employed. After supper, on the second day, the quartermaster at the gangway espied a small led squirrel playing on the wharf. His curiosity being aroused he watched the little fellow and noticed that lie was gradually nearing the gang plank. Boon ho stopped at the other end, and sitting on his haunches, looked inquiringly at the big sailor, who laugh ingly accosted him with: " Would you like to come on board ? As if he had understood the polite invitation, the would-be traveler al most immediately scampered up the plank, jumped over the bulwarks and ran down the gangway, to the great amusement of the quartermaster, as well as of one or two others who wit- I nesßed the incident. A search was made for the young stowaway, hut ho had effectually hid den himself, and was not seen again until the vessel was far out on the lake, on the second day following. Then he was observed apparently searching for food. Bread and corn-meal were scattered about for him, and quickly disappeared in away to indicate a very good appe tite. Fnding that he was not molested, he became quito tame, and was a great pet with all on board. When wo made the first port after leaving Frankfort, it was sup posed that he would loavo us, and nec essarily be logged as a "deserter," but such was not the case. He evidently had no intention of leaving, for al though we stopped at mnny places during the next three weekß and he went on shore regularly, he nevor failed to return on time, and was with us when the vessel again ran into Frankfort harbor. Much interest was now manifested, both by officers and men, to see what the little passenger would do. Ho did not keep us waiting long. When the ship was made fast to the dock and the boatswain had "piped down," our young friend came up, took a look at the wharf to assure himself that it was indeed hia old home, nnd quickly, without saying good-by, ran down the gang-plank, and was soon out of sight. We never saw him again, but could he have been followed, no doubt an interesting scene would have been wit nessed when he rejoined his family. What a wonderful story ho had to tell! and what a hero he must be hereafter in the eyes of squirrels who never took a free ride on a Government ship!— Youth's Companion. ■inner Knew r.ismerc. A new story comes to the front about ex-Senator Tabor of Colorado, savs the Washington Post. During the Sena torial contest which resulted in the election of Ed Wolcott, Tabor was vio lently opposed to the former's election. A gentleman from the East called on Tabor and found the ex-Senator going over a list of the members of the Legis lature. The Eastern gentleman had some business with Tabor, and when through with it he thought he would en gage in a general conversation, and having just read the mueh-talkod-of latest publication, he said to Tabor: "Senator, what do you think of 'Bobcrt Elsmere ?'" "Elsmcre?" said Tabor; "oh, Wolcott bought and paid for that d d scoun drel three months ago. No use trying to do anything with him." Still Valuable. Eastern Youth (out West) —"I have called to get you to help me locate lot 992 in this village -1 mean city. My late uncle left it to me and I have come West to see about it. Pretty valuable by this time, I Bupposc." Heal Estate Agent (looking over map) —"Hum! It was valuable when your uncle bought it, but the grado of the streets has been changed and it is now 500 feet below the curb, and full of water." "Eh? Water? Good gracious! It can't be of any use at all." "Well, I dunno. If you like frogs' legs you might get a meal off it once in a while."— New York Weekly. THE old toper always has a gin phiz. HISTORY OF TIIE WATCH. IT DATES BACK A FEW HUNDRED YEARS. The First Clocks Were Cumbrous Tilings, ami for a Long Time Were Only I'Hftil iu Convents ami Monasteries—Some Queer Old Watches. watch, and if men have lived (as Kome scientists claim) for 100, COO years, then how singular the fact that for 99,G00 years of that time no one over had a watch. Of course tho watch grew out of the preoedent use of the clock, and it was about 000 years between the first clock and the first watch. That is as closely as one can estimate dates when the precise year of either invention is unknown. The invention of the clock is generally ascribed to the monk Gerbort, who was afterward raised to the tiara, under the name of Popo Sylvester 11. The first clocks wore cumbrous things, calculated only to be bung to the wall, and worked with cords and weights. For a long time they were only used in convents and monasteries, where they helped to make miserable the lives of the inmates. Oth ers say that the invention of the clock was due to the Saracens. However, it was invented aud for a long time was made iu such a laige and cumbrous form that no one thought of reducing it to pocket size. Some time in tho fourteenth century tho escapement was introduced in what is known as Do Wyck's clock* This allowed of reduction in size, but it Booms to have taken 100 years more for the idea to have gotten into men's minds that tho clock might be made small enough to carry in the pocket, or to hang ks an ornament upon the person. The city of Nuremburg claims to have made the first watch in 1477, and Peter Holl, of that city, made watches of steel as early ns 1490. It is certain that tho first watches wore called Nuremburg eggs —a fact that identifies both the place of making and the shape of tho watch. The works were inclosed in circular metal cases, and wore hung from tho girdle. They generally suggested the idea of tho egg. Tho first English watches were made upon a different principle. Thoy had weights and were used as a pocket-clock. The earliest mention made of one under its present name is of a watch belonging to Edward VI. as being "one larum or watch of iron, tho case being likowiso of iron guilt, with two plummets of lead." Such early watches had only one hand, and required to be wound up twice a day. The dials were of silver and brass, the cases had no crystals, but opened at the back and front, and were four or five inches in diameter—about the size of a common dessert plato. Henry VIII., wbo died in 1547, had one of those pockot-clocks, as did his con temporary, Charles V. Watches seem to have come into a wider use about that time in France than in England, for thoy wore named with clocks in a statute on acted in Paris in 1544. All the earlier watches wore extremely rude measurers of timo, and the necessity of frequent winding is alluded to by Shakspoare in "Twelfth Night," where he makes Malvolio say: "I frown the while, and perchance wind-up my watch, or play with some rich jewel." The first great improvement of the watch—the substitution of springs for weights—was in 1560. These springs wore not coiled, but were only straight pieces of steel, boon afterward the fusee was invented, connected with a coiled mainspring in a barrel. This was fast ened to a pieee of catgut, which was wound around ft spiral-grooved fusee in tho shape of ft cone. The last coils were around the small end of the cone, thus presenting in the running of the watch tUo least leverage to the greatest force of the spring. As tho cone was unwound, the leverage changed in proportion to the force of the spring. This made it possi ble to attain considerable accuracy in the running of the watch. A small linked chain was soon substituted for tho cat gut, and this style of manufacture re inained until comparatively recent times. The spiral hair-spring, which is so neces sary for equalizing the motion, was in vented and attached about the year 1658 by Dr. Hook. Lengthening or shortening the spring lessens or increases the vibra tions and made the regulation of the watch an easv matter. The oases of the early watches wore made for personal adornments, and werG of all sorts and shapes. Que that be longed To Lady Fifzgerald telle in a curi ous way the classio tale of Jupiter and Ganymede. The woiks are contained in the body of the eagle, which opens across the center and displays the dial plate richly engraved with scrolls and flowers. The silver gilt watch in the form of o death's head was given to Mary Queen of Scots by her husband, the Dauphin of France. It was lately in the possession of Sir John Lauder, and came to his fam ily through Catherine Seton, to whom the unfortunate Mary gave it before hei execution. There is a similar watch in a Boston museum that belonged to some one of the pilgrim fathers. It is of silver in the form of a death's head, but differs from the one engraved here by opening at the under jaw. It has at the top a small ring by means of which it was attacked to the girdle. When the famous Diana of Poitiors bo came allied to Henry 11. she was a wide* and the complacent court went into I mourning on a most grievous scale, j Rings were made in the form of skele tons, coffins of gold contained chased and enameled figures of death, and watches were made in the form of skulls. : These were worn as ornaments, and are a i fair sample of the extremes to which fashion will sometimes go. Early in the seventeenth century all these strange forms passed out. The 1 watch-makers succeeded in making the j watches more compact and they assumed ! substantially their present form, exoepl I that in order to protect the key-hole they were surrounded by a large silver case. This gave them the shape of the flal turnip und the popular voice irreverently called them "turnip watches." The outei case was usually the repository of sundry verses and devices—tokens of love oi friendship—which, although generally printed on satin, or more frequently worked with the needle, were always designated watch papers. Sometimes they were poetical conceits like the fol lowing: Time is—the present moment well employ; Time was—is past—thou canst not it enjoy Time future—is not and may never bo; Time prosont—is the only tlmo for thee. The French were the first to introduce judicious improvements in weight and size. A watch that once belonged to Charles 1., having been presented to him by Louis XIII., was of an oval shape, two inches by one and a half on the face, nnd an inch thick. The back is chased iD high relief with a figure of St. George conouering the dragon. The motto oi the Garter, "Honi soit qui mol y pense, r surrounds the ease, which is enriched with enameled colors. There was one exception to the grotesque forms which wont out of fashion in the seventeenth century, and that was in the case of watches made in the form of a cross and intended to be hung by a ring to the girdle. They are sometimes called abbess watchos, but for no good reason. One curious fact in the history of watches is that in one of the halls at Oxford there is the figure of a female who is said tc havo been the first wearer of a watch No one seems to know what her name was or when she lived. The Small Boy's Scheme. "Gimmo a nickel's worth of buck shot," said a St. Paul gamin wearing somewhat disordered raiment. His head just topped the counter in a ba zar devoted to sporting goods. "I suppose lie will load them into a rusty pistol and accidentally shoot some one of his intimate friends,' suggested a bystander. "Oh, no," replied the proprietor of the gun store; "he has no firearms. He is going in to beat tlio nickel-in-the-slol scheme, and I suppose I am particeps criminia." "How?" "Why, lie will put them on the street-car track; the car will convert tliem into the exact size of nickles am? pennies, and, of course, von can antici pate the financial pauic iiable to ensue in St. Paul shortly, with a gum ma chine at almost every corner." St. Paul Pioneer Press. Outgrown Ills Father. Mr. Hawbeck—You ain't seen mj son afore, have yer ? City Visitor—Why, no. Ycrv likely ihov, isn't he? Takes after his father I Mr. Hawheck—You bet he does, wlier |he gets riled. Took after me four time! j 'round tli' barn this moruin' 'cause 1 ' spoke kind 'r irritated to him.— Judys The Longevity or Birds. The swan is the longest-lived bird, and it is asserted that it has reached the age of 100 years. Knauer, in his work entitled "Naturhistoriker," states that he has seen a falcon that was 162 years old. The following examples are cited as to the longevity of the eagle and vulture: A sea eagle captured iD 1715, and already several years of age, died 104 years afterward, in 1810; a white-headed vulture, captured in 1706, died in 1826, in one of the aviaries of Schoenbrunn Castle, near Vienna, where it had passed 118 years in cap tivity. Paroquets and ravens reach an age of over 100 years. The life of sea and marsh birds sometimes equals that of several human generations. Like many other birds, magpies live to be very old in a state of freedom, but do not reach over twenty or twenty-five years in captivity. The nightingale lives bnt ten years in captivity and the blackbird fifteen. Canary birds reach an age of from twelve to fifteen years in the cage, but those flying at liberty in their native islands reach a much more advanced age. THIS IS an age when everything goes, except tho bore and the Sunday night caller. flow MEN MUST DRESS. CUE MATERIAL AND THE SHAPING OF THE CLOTH OF 1890. Cuts of Coats Where with Gentlemen May Feel Abreast or the Year's Fashions- Wide Wale Worsteds uml Soft Finish to Rule the Modes of Good Dressing the Current Season. HE question as to liow a man shall dress himself is easi er asked than an swered. There are certain canons of taste which override i all fashions, and to ft these he must ap -1 peal who would be c\ really and truly a ■ well-dressed man. A R Chicago Times re " porter recently vis ited a number of the arbiters of taste and material in the "World's Fair city, and out of their wisdom the following facts were evolved: In the first place men's clothes, as a whole, if they are to be really chic, will show the softest possible finish, coats will display low openings and ample sleeves, vests will follow this form, and trousers will sit moderately close to the leg as to the upper works, and will exhibit a moderate spring at the bottom. In overcoats the Chesterfield or fly front oversack will be much more worn than any other style. It will be made from worsteds and almost all styles of soft overcoatings, and will be of me- THB COVHBT < OAT. dium length, thirty-six to thirty-seven j inches being the limits for a man of j average height, 5 feet 8 inphes. | The covert overcoat, made of covert : overcoating, modified for street wear, j will be quite popular with many who have no very profound regard for the eternal fitness of things. | For day and half dress the double i breasted frock is the. most appropriate, ; as it is the most elegant style of coat made. For day dress it will have lapels of ample width, well peaked, and silk-faced to the button-holes, oi which there will he five on each side. It will roll when closed to the third hole, hut when unbuttoned will roll free. The lengths for a man of aver age height will be eighteen and one half inches to the hip buttons and thirty-six inches to the bottom of skirts. It will be made of worsteds and cheviots. The three-button cutaway frock will bo, as for several seasons, more popu lar than the four, two, or one button or. The lengths will average eighteen and one-half and thirty-tliree inches, the roll will be moderately long, and the fronts will be cut away so as to show one button of the vest. The four-but toner will close higher on the chest and button a trifle lower, while the ONIC-UUTTON CUT A WAT. the two-buttoner will open lower and be cut away from rather higher above the waist-seam. For half-dress these cutaways will be made from worsteds or cheviots, with the edges flat-braided narrow if the former and double stitched narrow if the latter material is used. The vest worn with them may be of DOUBLB-BREABTED FROCK COAT. the same material as the coat, or of any fancy vesting, and the trousers may he of any style of striped, cheek ed or plain trousering. Early in the season the doubts-breast ed sack will, perhaps, be crre worn than the other styles. It has quite a number of good points to recommend it. It can be worn without an over coat, it is very dressy when silk-faced, and it is very becoming to a good figure. So much for the general effect to be produced by the new year's clothes. Now for the special and particular de tails out of which these results are to be achieved. The first out shows the covert coat. The material represented is a covert overcoating. The length for a man of average height, five feet eight inches, is thirty-four inches. The hack is cut whole, with pearly straight side-seams that are finished with vents, and the form, though its shape is sug gested, is fitted loosely. The collar nnd lapels are light, the roll averages four and a half inches in length, and tho edges are double-stitched moderate ly wide. The pockets have flaps to go in or out, and the sleeves, which are cut half and half, are finished with three rows of stitching around the lx>t torn. The seams are lapped and stitch ed to match the edges. In the next cut is exhibited one ol those new one-button cutawav suits which are designed especially for per sons of a rather corpulent build. The material is a wide wool worsted and a striped trousering. The roll of the coat is about six inches deep. The fronts are cut away from the closing button with a gentle curve, and are well rounded from midway of skirt to the bottom. The edges are bound, or flat-braided narrow, and the sleeves are finished with imitation cuffs, closed with two buttons. The vest extends about one and a half inches below the waist seam of the coat, closes with five buttons, and has a notched collar. The trousers are more shapely, pro- A mOHT-WmQHT OVBBCOAT, portionately, than for a regular form, but should have the same appearance of looseness. In the double-breasted frock coat shown in the next cut it is claimed that for half-dress there is nothing more suitable, effective, or appropriate than tho suit shown in this figure. The material represented for the coat and vest is a fancy diagonal worsted and for the trousers a very handsome, subdued, striped trousering. The col lar of the coat is cut rather long to a low gorge and tho lapels ore well peaked and spaced for five holes, to button four if desired. The silk ex tends to the end of holes and the edges ore flat braided. Tho sleeves are shapely and are finished to imitate cuffs closed with two buttons. The trousers for this and all othor lialf-dross suits average nineteen iuches at knee and seventeen and one-half to eighteen at the bottom. They have a slight spring. The next illustration shows a low roll sack suit the material of which is a striped cheviot. The collars and lapels are one and one-half inches wide and the fronts are cut with quite a curve from top to lower button. They are finished soft. Tho trousers with this suit average nineteen and one-half inches at the knee and eighteen at the bottom, and the side-seams are finished with a welt. In the figure represented following this the overcoat is a soft diagonaj cheviot, the coat and vest a medium wule worsted, and the pantaloons s striped trousering. The overcoat is an accurate repre sentation of a light-weight overcoat foi the current season, thrown open. Ail Old Idea In a New Form. The first cut shows a very prettily de signed and stylish combination chair and table that is just now coming Into COMBINATION CHAIR AND TADI.I. vogue; the second, the old style dining table and settee, which may still bo found in the houses of pioneer New COMBINATION srrrx* AND TABLE. England and New York families. It i) easy to see that the idea of the new may have bean taken from the old. The Engine 01 emulation. Great editor (severely)— There was no base-ball news in the paper to-day Local man—But, sir, base-ball isn't played in tho winter, and I've exhaust ed all the new club rumors, now asso ciation fakes, and reports of possible changes of one sort or another. There isn't a scrap more I can get hold of. "Then print the old scraps ovei again. You don't suppose I want tc lose all my subscribers, do you?"— New York Weekly. IN a report on the Kolar gold field of southern India, Mr. B. Smith mentions the finding of interest ing remains of ancient mining, such as old timbering, fragments of bones, an oil lamp, and pieces of earthonware. The fact that the old miners, with their simple appliances, rcaohod depth! of 200 or 300 feet, through hard rock astonishes him. WHEN ONE FALLS OVERBOARD, It Strikes Terror Ito the Hearts of the Bravest of Men. HEItE is no sound aboard ship so de- A v'morali/.ing as that J( \ of "Man over ft) a,\\, board!" It strikes <^jTv/1 S 1 terror to the heart v 1 of the bravest of S men, and only the L r—ll;—best disciplined crews can with f] * - stand the panic it if A / a=== " : ==s usually produces. fit) Almost every ship HFVX has a particular %-t ' -A- rule of action for such occurrences. The best precon certed arrangements, however, are often inapplicable, and success de pends maiidy on the presence of mind of the watch, the man at the life buoy, and the normal condition of the boats. A cool hand will drop the life buoy sometimes within reach of a man; a "bothered" one will either not let go at all or do so before the man has got near the stern. Of all persons aboard ship, the officer of the deck should be cool and collected. Rear Admiral S. B. Luce lays down the principle that the most important considerations when a man falls over board are: First, the quickest and most effectual method of arresting the ship's progress and how to keep her as near the spot where the man fell as possible. Second, to preserve the gen eral discipline of the ship, to maintain silence, and to enforce tho most prompt obedience, without permitting foolhardy volunteering of any kind. Third, to see that the boat appointed to be employed on these occasions is placed in such a manner that she may be cast loose in a moment, and when ready for lower ing that she is properly manned and fitted, so as to be efficient in all re spects when she reaches the water. Fourth, to take care in lowering the boat neither to stave or swamp her nor to pitch the men out. And, lastly, to have a sufficient number of the sharpest-sighted men in the ship sta tioned aloft in such a manner as to give them the best chance not only ol discovering the person overboard, but of pointing him out to the men in the boat, who may not otherwise know in what direction to pull. With steamers the difficulties tc overcome in rescuing a man overboard are comparatively few, inasmuch as a steam-vessel is alwavs under control sc long as her machinery is in good or der. The rule is to stop as quickly as possible, lower the life-boat, and pick the man up. The really fine points ol ! seamanship come into play when sail ing ships are being handled. The or deal is a trying one for the best of ofti cers, and the young seamen who can properly placo a large sailing ship and rescue a man that has fallen overboard deserve the highest credit for seaman ship qualities. Two Hundred Women Killed, A letter from Zanzibar says thatove) a year ago a caravan of 1100 Arabs left the East Coast to go into the interior tc trade. They have now returned, and one of the chiefs relates their advent ures. Arriving at Kavirondo, on the northeast shores of Victoria Nyauza the Arabs saw that tho natives had a good deal of ivory and that they had uc [guns. They attacked the tribe, ami . before the shooting had gone on long the natives were willing to do anything ' to make peace. After a long palaver with the chiefs the Arabs agreed to leave the country upon the payment to them of two hun died tusks of ivory and two hundred young women. The natives were glad to get rid of the enemy even on these hard conditions. As soon as they re ceived tho ivory nnd the women the Arabs started for the coast. They had a terrible time in the Masai country. There was a drought, and they almost perished of thirst. Then provisions became scarcer and scarcer, and the whole party was in danger of stnrva tion. Finally the Arab chiefs decided that, in order to save themselves and their ivory, it would bo necessary tc sacrifice their female slaves, who were very weak from their deprivations and could march no further. That night all of these two hundred young women were shot to death and their bodies were left in the camp foi beasts of prey. The victims happily had not a moment's warning of tlieij impending fate. Each murderer se lected his intended victim, nnd the horrible crime was accomplished sc speedily that few of the women made any outcry. With their force thus summarily reduced the Arabs were able to pull through the desert re gion, obtnining little more food tliar barely enough to sustain life. The chief who related these faetf in Zanzibar showed no compunction! , whatever for tho terrible crime ir ! which ho had assisted, but mentioned - the massacre only to give an idea o: the great loss they had sustained by tho necessary sacrifice of the two hun dred slaves. It is a curious fact that some of the murderers were troubled in mind because their necessities hac compelled them to eat rats and othe) unclean food, which is prohibited tc Mohammedans on the march.— Revw Francaise. Kind-Hearted. Mrs. Simkins has just heard tha her husband has been drawn to servi on a jury. "John Simkins on the crimiua jury!" exclaimed Mrs. Simkins. "Well all 7 can say is that I congratulate tbi criminals." "Why, Mrs. Simkins? Is your hus band a very merciful man ?" "Merciful? Why, John Simkin: wouldn't hang a pictur', much less t door, unless he was jest made to!" i Youth's Companion. Too Strong to Work. First tramp (watching men and worn en coming from the mill)— Pretty sickly i looking crowd, ain't they, Bill? Second tramp—They are, pard. A parson once told me that work was healthy, but I don't believe him. We'ri as fat as them people, ain't we? — Bos j ton Herald. I ■Not So Sensible. 1 "Father," exclaimed young Jenkins, ' entering the old gentleman's office, "1 have sold my newspaper office " "Sit down, Tom. lam glad to see [ that you are so sensible." "Yes, father, I have sold my office, but I have bought another one." "Get upl You have lost what little sense you ever did have."— Arkansau Traveler THE electrio companies seem to be almost as proud of their dead men as thev are of their live wires