One-fourth of the land surface of the globe is occupied by English -speaking people. The year 1803 began on a Sunday rod /rill finish on a Sunday, so that it will iontain fifty-three Sundays. Indiana ha 9 more Germans than any jther State. They constituc fifty-five per cent, of the population. Ex Secretary of War Elkins inclines to the abolition of both the sword and the saber, on the gr mud that they arc ao longer of the slightest practic.il use in actual warfare. One of the most striking features in connection with this age of electricity, remarks the New York Independent, is the wonderfully '.arge and rapid growth of books and pamphlets bearing upon the subject. An electrical journal recently assure ! Its readers that within a comparatively short time many trolley roads will be constructed in country districts for the express purpose of carrying farm pro ducts to market. The New England Farmer i 3 authority for the statement that "the condition of the average farmer in Now England, all things considered, is much better than that of the average farmer in most other lections of the country. Two car-loads of Boston girls have gone to Texas to supply the demand there for wives, which leads the Detroit Free Press to exclaim that "the man who seeks to escape from woman recklessly tackles the impossible." Fresh Government clerk 3 in Washing, ton are tempted by offer 3 of credit on all sides. This, explains the Atlanta Constitution, is because persons cm ployed by the Government must pay the debts contracted while in oftice or suffer dismissal. When a clerk is tardy in set tlement the creditor can have the amounnt of the debt deducted from the debtor's salary. During tho year 1892 England published 4915 new book? and 1339 new editions, or a total of 6254. Lust year the figures were 5706. The increase has been especially in the department ol novels, namely 1147 as compared with 896 in 1891. Theology reports 528, philosophy 579, medicine 127 new pub lications, while law has only twenty-six, altho poetry has 185, history 293, and geography 250. Chief Justice Fuller, haviug gone to his doctor's house in Washington recent ly in preference to sending tor the physician, found that gentleman absent and was invited into the library to await his return. The attendant who ushered the visitor in was ignorant of the latter'f station, but recognized him as a man of culture and kind impulses. This was evident from the surprising request that the Chief Justice should improve the time by writing a love letter for the man who let him in. Pens, ink, paper and envelop were proffered, nnd without hesitation the favor was granted, tin missive being completed before the phy sician's return. It is 6aid that when a native of Hawai: wishc3 to give evidence of his sorrow at the loss of a kinsman he ?ocs to some secluded spot and endeavors to knock out one of his front teeth. In case it is his maiden effort at mourning, relates the Atlanta Constitution, the bereaved not unfrequently bungles the job, and on looking over the debris often finds that be has knocked out a couple or more. If the grief stricken party, however, lacks the nerve or distrusts his prowess tc accomplish the tooth's displacement, a dear and obliging friend is always at hand to offer his assistance. As a resu't of this custom a man of middle age is often short so many teeth that gastronom ers are embarrassed in eating their food. American dentists will do a land office business in Hawaii if the United States annexes the islands. The New York Tribune maintains that there has been no revolution in the pro duction of cotton since Whitney in rented the gin and took the "seeding" of it out of the hands of the old women and children. Now, however, there is a proapect ot another great change. Over 601) machines have been invented in the last twenty years for picking tho cotton from the boll, and all have failed to give satisfaction. But still another is to be tested, and cotton men believe it will be successful. It will pick, it is laid, 10,000 pounds a day. An ordin ary field hand can pick of the short staple about 150 pounds a day, an 1 of the long staple about 350, so that the lew machine will do the work of about forty men. Fifty cents a hundred poua Is is considered fair wages la the cotton •elf. The machine, therefore, will eirn |SJ a day. PATIENCE. Bp patient! Eisy words to speak While plenty fills the cup of life. While heilth brings ro?es to the cheek, An 1 far removed are core and strife. Falling so glibly from the tongus Of those—l often think of this— Whom suffering has nev?r wrun■ Who scarcely know what putienc3 is. Bs patient! when the suflf'rer lies Prostrate beneath some fell disease, And longs, through torturing ngoniei, Only for one short hour of ease. Be patient! whon the weary brain Is raked with thought an 1 anxious care, And troubles in an en I less train Seem almost more than it can bear. To feel the torture o! delay. The agony of hope deferred; To labor still from day to day, The prize unwon, the prayer unheard. And still to hope and strife and wait The due reward of fortune's kiss; This is to almost conquer fatp, This is to learn what patienc3 is. Despair not! though the clou Is are dark, And storin and dnnger veil the sky; Lst fate and courage guide thy barque, The storm is pas\ the port is nigh. Be patient, and the tide will turn. Shadows will flea before the tun; These are the hopes that live and burn To light us till our work is done. —All the Year Houud. OLD BARNABY'S HESS. BY TOM HALL. ESS bad been put to a great deal of Jf - yv VV 1 rouble this day. jk fer v V was always Z&J plenty to do at jf Freshwater Ranch, K s ' le to l '° I or nian I swa3ffßl 1 Barn aby hnd ceased I Scuw tRJ I t0 ° f any P nrt >- J world long before / Geronimo had be r m* comc t h e xvar e^jef of the Chiricahua Apaches. Bess, his daughcr, ran the ranch, milked the cows, cooked tbc food, did the washing, attended to the modest little garden that she had managed to coax from the arid Arizona soil, and even gave the two cayuso ponies that belonged to her father all the grooming they ever got. Besides that, she had to attend to the selling of water from the artesian well that was the only excuse for Freshwa ter Ranch's exister.ee. There was not so very much (ravel on i the road thnt ran by Alt. Graham dowu ! to tl-e dusty Gdn Valley, but there were forty miles at a stretch of ir, and Fresh- I water Ranch had the only water that was to be found upon it. And so, when S the freight teams and the army ambu lances made the trip from Fort Grant to i Fort Thomas the teamsters were very glad to pay twenty-five cents a bucket ful for waler and double rates for forage. And this is how Bess made a living," a wretched, lonely, almost outcast livinw, ! for her father and herself. But there was plenty to do tlii3 day and plenty of excitement. For the first time in all her memory, a whole troop of handsome cavalrymen, with a bright cheeked and still handsomer lieuteuant at its head, had come to Freshwater Ranch to actually camp over night and perhaps stay even longerr A bunch of | White River Apaches, getting over the I elfccts of at s.vio drunk, had jumped the reservation, and started, on a murder ing nnd thicviug raid after their usuil manner. Quite after their usual man ner, also, two troops of cavalry had started in pursuit, following their trail with the faint hope of catching up with I the fleet-footed Apaches; while the re maindcrof two regiments of cavalry and ! twice as many of infantry had been put [ at patrol duty at the guarding of water holes, springs and mountain passes. It is the youug lieutenant that is sent j on this patrol duty, as a rule. The more experienced officers are sent in pursuit. And it is a hard grind, indeed, on the nerves of the impatient young lieuteuant to sit for days in his camp watching the surrounding country through his field glass and receiving tho reports of his scouts, always the same monotonous: "Didn't see no signs of'em, sir." It is bis ambition to get uuder fire. It is tho height of a young lieutenant's wildest dream to capture or kill a rai ding Apache. His heart burns with envy when he hears big Bailey, of his regi ment, who, but a few years before, was ' himself but a green lieutenant, talk in an i off-hand way about that time "we had | the fight with old Gerouimo dowuiu the 1 San Samoane Valley." Bailey looks in to the camp-fire as ho speaks, and does net appear to care whether any one is j listening. There is n tantalizing tilt to ! Bailey's forage-cap, and the youngster j swears that if he ever dees, by any good ! luck, happen to come across a hostile I Apache, he will cut off his head forth with and send it to Bailey, and do a little talking himself. He would hate Bailey if he wasn't such a jolly good fel low and so infernally kind when one I discovers that one is a little short of ready cash on one's stripling pay, and so j deuccdly clever about getting one's I mount in good trim when one has lamed j the poor beast with unskillful riding; ' all of which Bailey unfortunately is. Such was the precise situation of | young Mr. Bristow, second lieutenant of j the —th Regiment of United States Cav- j airy, on this day wheu Bess was at her wits' end with work and excitement. ! Chilcauno and his band had jumped the reservation at San Carlrs after murder- j ing a freighter and sealing his hoisss, | and all Southern Ariz ma was in a state of excitement. To be ordered out to guard a watering station is bad enough; but when you are quite persuaded that the miscreants have gone in another direction aud that you have no chance j whatever of being in or near at the death, the situation is almost uuboara- ! ble. 1 And that was why Lieutenant Bars tow fumed and fretted, and walked up and down in front of the half log, half adobe house called Freshwater Ranch, nil the long afternoon, and did nothing more importaut than to swear at a trooper much after the manner of several cap tain he knew; and then to apologize to the trcoper and make himself ridiculous just.because he had some of those higher ideas of the soldier, even though he were but a few months cut of West Poiut. And so Bess caught hut a few glimpses of the lieutenant as he occasionally parsed the door, but she saw that he was young and handsome, and her woman's lieatt was in a flutter. It was all she could do to think up something uuusu ally good to eat for supper. Besides the regular menu of biscuits, bacon, beef and potatoes she had some carefully treasured canned corn and some canned peaches. She wished to make some peach pic 3 with those peaches, but in her present state of excitement she was quite sure she would make an utter failure of ir, and she did not dare risk thcattcmpt. She got out her very brightest and new est calico dress and braidc l her unruly hair for the first time in months. She did not even scold the sly trooper, whom she caught stealing some milk, for fear the young lieutenant would come around fo that side of the house—which would he dreadfully embarrassing. And yet she wanted to see the lieutenant and hear him talk—oh, so much! She had road in novels some mysterious thiugs about how young people fell in love with c.ich other and married—and— well, cvreything is possible in this world. It was at supper time that they really met. The lieutenant made a polite bow. lie was a little bit surprised. lie had heard some of the other officers of the garrison say laughingly that the only pretty woman in Arizona was Bainaby's Bess, excepting always, from regimental courtesy, the ladies of the regiment. Bui 1 he had forgotten all about it in the excitement of his first trip in the field. It occurred to him now, but she was prettier than he had imagined she could be. His iden9 of beauty were framed in a West Poiut landscape, and his divin ities had been dressed in costly stulTs and wore diamonds, and were buds from mature New York family trees. But he had not seen a pretty woman in several months, and he was just a little bit em barrassed, himself. He hardly noticed the calico. He was quite charmed by the white apron. Heconclu led at once that, perhaps, this first scout of hi 3 would not he so awfully dull after all. He would flirt a little—only in fun, of course. It would be rather a reliof from the dullness of the post. So he ate in silence, and stared so hard at Bess that j her cheeks flushed a deeper crimson than , they had over known before. And to her j amazement and delight he insisted on I calling her SI ss Barnaby. In her day dreams she had often imagined some | handsome young man addressing her re i spectfully as Miss Barnaby. Here was I the delightful reality. She spilled the coffee, and could not cat a mouthful ot supper, although she was tired and hun gry- And after supper the youug lieutenant insisted on helping her wash the dishes. He said it would be great fun, and quite a relief from the rough life of a soldier. Poor youngster, he had become so used to war's aturms. In fact they had be come quite a bore. And it seemed to Bess that he stood awfully close to her. Once o.' twice their hands touched—an accident, she wis quite sure. And, then, when all her work was finished, the dishes cleaned, the cows and horses fed (in all of which duties the young lieu tenant helped)—delight of delights! he actually asked her to tako a little walk with him. Next to taking her to a real ball, where people danced and ate i ice cream, as ahe had read in thp books j and story papers, ho could have done nothing more to make her absolutely | happy. ! As for him, it seemed like old days in camp at West Poiut. Bho was a girl, and she wns pietty. Her calic) dress in the moonlight looked very well, aud she j had taken off the apron. They strolled up the road a little distance and then branched off on a winding trail that led down to a little valley that was flooded with the rich moonlight that broke through the clear Arizona atmosphere. There was an intersecting tiail at the foot, and when they reached it, Bess gave a little start, and the lieutenant, with all his old West Point promptness, took advantage ol the opportunity to place his arm around her waist. "Don't be afraid," he whispered very manfully. ' "Oh, lam not," she answered, dc i murely. | And thon she stooped down quickly | and seemed to pick something up from j tho trail. 1 "Did you drop auything?" he asked | with mock politeness. "Why didn't you : tell me? It was my duty to pick it up, | you know." j "I did not drop anything," she an- I swered. "Let's sit down on this rock." I They sat down on the rock, and tho young lieutenant, with his heart beating i very fast, pit his arm around her waist j again and took hold of her hands aud j found himself unconsciously looking for lings, in the manner of young men who j wish to hold a young lady's hand and feel in duty bound to offer some slight j excuse to the fair oue. They did not tall; very much. There was not much to , talk about. Tueir mutual friends svere | few, aud therefore there could be no gossip. The theatre, hooks, stylos— | about everything was barred, from ne j cessity. Nevertheless, it was not long before the lieuteuant's brown moustache drew gradually near ffc Bess's pretty lips, and, not long after that, Bess received | the first kiss she had ever had from a young man. She did not struggle. Shu was utterly unaware of the arts of her fair sisters in the Eist. But she did thru squarely around and look the lieutenant very earnestly in the face. 1 "Do you mean anything by that?" she asked bim. He was surprised at the question, and I he was ceutleinaa enough to perceive that what was a mere evening's diversion to him might be something infinitely more serious to a lonely girl on almost a Western desert. Ho took his hand from her waist and m oved away a little. 4t No," he answered fraukly, 44 0n1y that you are pretty—and I didn't think you'd mind." * 4 I didn't mind," answered Bess, "and I wouldn't mind if I thought you cared for me. In fact,"she added, with alarm ing candor, 4 *l would like it if I were sure you were not making fun of me." The lieutenant wa3 silent. 44 Te1l me," she said, clasping his hand excitedly, 44 if I should do something that would be a great benefit to you— would you thiuk more of me—would you love me?" - t4 No," he auswered quickly, standing up and lookiug at her a little curiously. 44 You arc too serious. I want to be fair. Too fact is, I am engaged—to a young lady in New York. We are going to be married iu a ycur or two, when I gel more pay. And perhaps sooner. If 1 could-only do something to distinguish myself, you know. Her father has enough iufiucnce to get rac promoted to the stall or something like that, so wo could live in the East and have more pay. Perhaps I owe you an apology." She was clutching the rough edges of the rock. 44 1s she very beautiful?" she asked. <4 I think so," ho answerod. 44 53 C, here is a picture of her. You can see what she looks like in the moonlight." She looked at the photograph a long time. "Does she always drc33 like that?" she asked. 44 N0," lie answered laughingly. "That is a ball dress—an evening dress. It would hardly do for her to go out doors in a dress like that. She might catch cold. But she is just as pretty in other dresses; and I love her very much." Bess handed back the photograph and looked for a long time at the yellow trail. She had tb bite her lip to repress a sigh, but she had beeu too long aloue and friendless to lo9e her self-controi. 4, L00k here," she suddenly a9ked, 4, if you were to catch these Indians, would that be what you wanted to do to be able to get your promotion and marry her?" 4< l should say it would," he answered bitterly. 4, But that isn't my luck." 4t ltis! it is!" she cried, falling upon her knees by the trail. <4 Seo, I give her to you. See there—and there—and there! Those are pony tracks 1 See here I" She held up to liirn the thing she had picked up wheu he was mock ingly polite. 44 1t is the lash of an In dian quirt—worn through. They are riding hard and their horses are tired. They were in a hurry to get by here without being discovered by you, cr they would have stopped to pick it up. Run, run, I tell you! I can read the trail better than you or any of your men. You cau catch them beforo morning I Hun !' v He had started betore she had finished, and was bounding up the trail with long, athletic strides, leaving her alone on her knees at the intersection of the trails. She was still there when the troop rode silently by with the anxious but silent young lieutenant at its head. Ho bowed to her as he passed, but she did not sec him. After the last pack-mule had passed out of sight down the valley, she rose and walked slowly up the moun tain. "I was very foolish," she said. "He has kuo.vn her u long time, and he never saw me before. Besides, she wears silk dresses and is rich. But that should not make any difference in love. He kissed me! Why should he kiss me if he did not care for me? It is queer. She is a great lady, and I—" She hurst into tears and cried for a long time as she sat ou the yellow trail at the top of the hill. It was far into the night when she arose to go. She hoard, far off in tho distance, through the clear air, tho faint pepping of car bines anil rilies. "I have given her to him," she mut tered, as she made her way uncertainly to the ranch. "Sue is a lady and wears silk; and she will never know about me, for he will he ashamed to tell her; and audi am going to ask Father Jose, when he corues here next year with his little Mcxicrn donkeys and his candles and his white robes, why it is that God has never sent any one to love inc."— The Ledger. The Afghans. I Of all the races with which the Eng | lish havo come in close contact, tho 1 Afghans are tho most uncivilized in uaturo and grain. They aro tierce, bloodthirsty, fanatical and treacherous; their good qualities are of the elementary, domestic kind, and their highest virtuo is courage, which they possess in a con spicuous degree. Tney are uncivilized in the sense that they are without any nntional cohesion or responsibility. Each man is independent of his fellows, and rejects the authority of even tribal chiefs. No doubt there aro in every clan or tribe men of prominence for their wealth or prowess or cunning, who command a certain following. But their lnlluonco is personal and temporary, and vanishes as quickly as it has sprung up. In aomo quiet Utopia where tho individual might be allowed to develop in peace, this in tense individuality might be no disad vantage. But it is otherwise in a country like Afghanistan, torn with intestine discord and jealously regarded by power ful neighbors.—Fortnightly Review. Hens' Eggs As Coin'. In the province of Jauja, Peru, hens' eggs are circulated a3 small coin, forty eight or fifty being counted for a dollar. In the market place and in the shops the Indians make mo3t of their purchases with this brittle sort of money; 003 will give two or three for brandy, another for cigars, and a third for indigo. Tne eggs are packed in boxes by the store keepers and sent to London. From Jauja alone several thousand loads of eggs are annually forwarded to the capi tal— New Yolk Dispatch. CHICAGO LAN DM AH KS. SOME NEW ONES THAT AT TRACT ATTENTION. Heaviest Tower and Largest Front Poor in the World - Farts About the Great Sky- Scrapern—A Fort Turned Into a Temple of Music. limit on Made Ground. Charles E. Nixon, writing of Chi cago in the Inter Ocean, says: Thers Is something magnetic in the growth; In the flashing spirit of this prairie metropolis—the Indian trading post of 1812, a plain of ashes in 1871, the sixth city of the world to-day. It almost seems like some story of j Aladdin to look down its broad boule vards, lined with immense buildings I that tower into the daikcning sky, j and believe it all rests as a firm basis ; upon the site of a marshy border land | that half a century ago was almost on a level with the great lake that overflowed its front. Let us glance at some of the archi tectural wonders that "o'crtop the topless towers of Troy" or the pyra mids of old Egypt. One can hardly credit that c'ayey and uncertain soil could be made to sustain on a com paratively small foundation a. tower X r ill THE HIT,BEST AND HEAVIEST TO. KR IN THE CITV NOHIHEKN PACIFIC RAILWAY STA TI N. 250 fect high, such as ornaments the Northern Pacific Hallway Station, each pile in its foundation supporting tons. This tower is 28x28x250, and weighs 0,082 tons. Eew people are familiar with the fact that the tower of the Auditorium weighs twice as much as the famous Eiffel Tower of Paris, and is on an area of founda tion fractional compared with that of the Parisian wonder, standing firm as a rock on floats of steel rails an chored far below the level of the lake, that is only a stone's throw distant. To the eye accustomed to harmoni ous proportion, these great buildings naturally impress more by their mag nitude than their artistic grace; but connoisseurs will involuntarily admire the new Woman's Temple or the Pullman Building as graceful and artistic massive compositions in gran ite and brick. Then there Is the plain, classic facade of the Loiter Building, the largest store In the world, surpassing in size the famous Bon Manhe of Paris. There Is the great Home Insurance, the imposing Rookery, having rooms for 4,000 and 6,000 tenants; or, looking to t-he north, behold the Masonic Temple, the larg est otlice building ever constructed, with its 5,000 tons of steel welded to gether, towering 200 feet in the air, surmounted by a crystal garden, filled with exotics of the tropics; indeed, there are so many of these architect oral giants recently sprung into life In this city that it is difficult to dis criminate in describing them. Pcihaps some of the lesser build- W rnE i.aeiiie-t front noon in the world. lugs that would be wonders elscr where more likely satisfy the artistic critical canon of taste. But the field is prolific in this line and adds to the pcrp'exity. Our foreign friends and native visiting brotfyeje w ill pause in admiration before oi r Art Institute, or the imposing col umned frontofthc Studebaker Build ing: get a glimpse of the Alharabra In Kinsley's Moorish front in brick and gold, or the sturdy Norman spirit of Richardson in the dark-red walls of Field's wholesale store. One conspicuous structure on Michigan bonlfivard that would ini- I press the critical John lluskln, and as most unique and interesting, is ! the First Regiment Armory, now the ! Trocadero. It is in dignity strongly j suggestive of a fortress, picturesque ly Indicating the conditions that led : to the building of mediaeval castles, i It is generous in dimensions, cover ing an area of 164 by 174 feet. To the height of ,75 feet the exterior walls are heavy masses of brown stone, unbroken by any apeiture, ex cepting by the 40 foot wide dooiway on Michigan boulevard, which is the regimental sallyport, and through whioh the command can march out In fu'l company front. This opening is barred by a heavy oak and steel door, swung like a portcullis, and ly ing back of Ihc embrasures in tlie thickness of the walls. It is pro tected by firing-slots in the heavy reveals on either side (think of a front door 40 by 40 feet, weighing tons). The lowest window sill is 35 fe"t from the ground, and six feet from the floor within. They are barred by heavy iron grills, being narrow ports, for tiring, and on the outer and inner jamb to give greater range, and when not In use arc closed by heavy steel plates. The whole exterior mass is crowned by heavily corbeled co-nice forming both breast works and firing ports, through which latter the face of the wall is com manded. Each corner of the build ing is marked by a heavy round tur. ret, from which an enfilading Are can bo maintained along the outer face of the main walls. For the nonce this remarkable building will be thrown open to the public as a temple of amusement: the shrill fife and the call of the war drum will be silent to the music of peace. The architects of the Auditorium are converting the great drill hall and Its winding galleries into an audi torium that will have a seating ca pacity for about 5,000 people. Th's great room Is 10 by 175 feet, with out a pillar or partition, the three stories above being suspended by great rods from the steel trusses thai suppo.t the roof. Asa place of en tertainment it will worthy of its famous namesake, the Trocadero ol Paris. It will be furnished with [a complete and beautiful stage; and the ventilation, electric lighting, and acoustics will incorporate all the latest and best devices. The great banquet hall will be utilized as a restaurant, from which the music can be heard. If Chicago's great buildings will attract attention by day they will take a new interest with the shining lamps of nightfall; the great boule vards thronging with a restless multitude will blaze with light; the huge buildings, seemingly towering up among the stars, will cast strange fantastic shadows; circles of light will Illumine the tower of the. North ern; the Trocadcro will appear like some grand old feudal castle, whose outlines blaze with electric lights; powerful flash lights will Hash from the lop of the Masonic Temple miles out over the scintillating waves ot the lake, and every great archi tectural wonder will serve as the basis of some bright beacon and show that the spirit of Chicago never sleeps, and that the witchery of the night will outcharm the day in pre senting attractions outside the walls of the White City. THE ATTRACTIVE ACE. Opinion* a* to When a Ii Mont Intore*' Benedict, Bob, and I eat around a smoothly polished fable, discussing matters and things, including ludics on dress pa-ade on the avenue. Benedict hnß married within the last twelve months. Bob, if rumor be correct, is looking for a second wife. Of course, I otli mon feol entirely competent to give me points. "At what ago is a woman most at tractive?" I submitted, reflectively. "Just before she is a woman," replied Bob, promptly, the touch of Irish in him betraying itself, as it always does, when ho is particular;}' interested ill his subjoct. "When she is on the border land of possibilities, but has not yet ex changed the arthssness of a child for the artfulness of a woman. When she is unspoiled by flattery and contact with the world; when she has enthusi asms and loves or hates with her whole heart, undaunted by policy and Mis. Grundy; before she lias read Tolstoi and Ibsen, and before she lias begun to feel lier power. Then is the time when a mail may tako her to his heart and mold her to his ideal!" "Oh, nonsense!" broke in Benedict, impatiently. (Boh Is 47, and his Tr ends don't like to see lilin making a fool ot himself over infants.) "Why do you want to take a girl to raise? Youth is very pretty in pictures and verse, but innocence, with its attendant Ignorance and shallowness, would give marital dyspepsia! Deliver mo from the child woman, who is neither one thing nor the other; who is talanclng between a spanking ot one and the scepter of the other! She cannot be comfort, com panion, counselor, or friend. At best, she Is a pretty plaything, to be petted, coaxed, humored, and waited upon. Now and Ihen she is bright, never clever; occasionally witty, but usually port; she does things that nro foolish and rash, considering herself original and independent; she has seen the surface of things, and trios to make deep remarks, ending with a lot of silly nothings that men smile at an-l make allowance for, because the little lady doce not know herself. "With her a thing is perfectly lovely or perfectly droadiul, and there ends her conversational powers or her appre ciation. Give me the woman who knows a thing or two; the woman who is a woman; who is intelligent, strong, and helpful, and who knows a bit of the world as it is. When such a womnn is kind, a man gets his reward for living. But deliver me from the raw material!" ,'aok Straw, in New York Becorder. future of Cast le Garden. Castle Garden, in the Battery, New ork City, nn-e the home of grand opera, and the place of a national ex hibition. and afterward the landing place of millions of immigrants, is nov to become an aquarium. The Park Board has approved a bill to bo introduced in the Legislature appro priating $150,000 for the e tablish went of the aquarium. Schema for a New State. Some tireless Fastern genius has eonceived the scheme of forming a new State out of tne northern section of Michigan. Wisconsin and Minne sota. To this he would give the name of Superior, not because of the peculiar character which would bo supposed to attach to the district, hut because it forms the lower fringe of Lake Superior. UNCLE SAM'iS GREAT SEAL ITS TRUE HISTORY AS PREPARED BY THE STATE DEPARTMENT. It Is Contained in a Massive Mahog any Box and Is Carefully Guard ed by the Clerks. Y I J" HE great seal of the United I i States, which is contained in a I massive mahogany box in the 5" State Department and carefully guarded by the clerks, whose dutiei are to see that its impress ia properly affixed to State papers, is of much interest to visitors to the department, but its truo history was never written until a few months ago, when, under orders from the Cabinet, an account of it was pre pared by one of the historians of the de partment and printed at the Govern ment's expense for distribution among State libraries and prominent persons. The pamphlet was prepared with all the care that its importance carried, baun 1 in rich covering, with the stamp of the seal imprinted upon the outside. It tell; that the final nttompt to perfect a seal was made by order of the Continental Congress, which appointed a committee, consisting of Thomas JefTeraon, John Adams and Benjamin Franklin, who were told to go ahead and prepare a de. vice for the National seal nnd coat of arms. After several months' labor the committee suggested a disign most elaborate in execution, but which did not meet with very general approval. This device represented Puaroah sittin • in an open chariot, with n cro.vu on his head and a sword in his hand, passing through the waters of the Red Sea in pursuit of the Israelites. It lys from a pillar of fire in a cloud, expressive of the Divine presence and command, beimed upon Hoses, who stood on the shore and extended a hand over the sea, which caused it to overwhelm Paaroah. Ujder neath was the motto, "Rebellion to ty rants is obedience to God." .. Later on another attempt was made to arrange a dcvico by a second committee, which resulted in one not quite so ela borate and pretentiou. fiiis design contained a constellation of thirteen stars, with the same number of alti mate stripes. This, too, met with disapproval, and the matter was let alone for some yesr3. Then, after some experiments, a device •was submitted that suited, and was adopted on June 20, 1782. The first seal was cut out o( brass, and was first used upon the commission granting full power and authority to Washington to arrange with the British for an cxchango of prisoners. This device was in use for fifty years, and varies little from the pres ent seal except in detail of execution. Tho second seal was cut in Philadel phia in 1841, and, by some mistake, seven of the thirteen nrrows which it should have had were left out. The prcsentseal was made by TiffaDyin 1885 by order of Secretary Frcylinghtiyscn alter the de -1 sigu had been passed upon by a commit tee of historical scholars and authorities on hernldry. It is not true, as goncrally supposed, that the seal is nlfixed to all appointments made by the President, us its impress is put only upon commissions of Cabinet officers, ceremonious commu nications from the President to heads of foreign Governments, conventions, treat ies, and formal agreements of the Pres. ident with foreign powers, pnrdous, or commutations of sentence, warrants and miscellaneous commissions of civil of ficers, whose appointments are not now especially directed to be signed under a different seal. All treaties to which the seal is affixed have the impression made also with a wax wafer, with a red, white and blue cord runuing through it. Tho treaties are then packed in boxc3 of highly-polished and expensivu woods, to be sent to the country negotiating them with us. The treaties of some foreign G avert inents have been sent iu boxes of gold and silver, richly ornamented, in some instances, svith valuable stones. These boxes are carefully stored in the archievcs of the department.—New Yorx Sun. The Courage ol Elephnit?. They will submit day day after day ti have painful wounds dressed in obedi ence to their keeper, and meet danger in obedience to orders, though their inte'- ligence is sufficient to understand the peril, and far ton great for man to trick them into a belief that it is uon ex stent. No animal will face danger more readily at man's bidding. As an instance take the following incideut, which recently occurred in India an I was communicated to the writer. A small female elephant was charged by u buffalo in high grass, and hoi rider, in the hurry of the mo ment and perhaps owing to the sudden ..oppiug of the elephant, fired nn ex plosive shell from his rifle, not iuto thu buffalo, but into the elephant's shoulder. The wound was BO severe that it had not healed a year later. Yet the elephant stood firm, although it was gored by tho buffalo, which was then killed by an other gun. What is even more strango is that the elephant was not "gun-shy"' afterward.—Loudon Spectator. Frozen ill a Hospital. It seems to be a tacitly understood "" principle in Euglnnd that one who is not robust enough to resist the efl'x'.sof cold is not fit to survive, and any attempt to keep public places reasonably warm in the winter is seldom made. A public hospital is the last place in the world, oue would think, that could do without beat, but it is reported that a child was actually frozen to death the other day in the waiting room of Guy's Hospital, one of the most famous institutions of Lon don. The child was sick with teething, and the mother took it to the hospital to Eee the doctor. She had to wait five hours in the cold till her turn cane, an 1 when the doctor finally did sec the baby, he found it in the last stages of freeziag to death. An inquest was held, and there has been much talk about cold y waiting rooms, but so far as heard from no stove has been put up in that one.— New Orleans Picayune.