/ According to tho Now York Mail and Express nearly four thousand chil dren in that city are refused admission to the public schools for "Jack of ac- ; commodation." Tho Hartford Journal declares that moneyed men of to-day have their per sons as well guarded as the Czar of Russia, to protect them front the murderous cranks which now infest the whole country. ' Over seventy-two per cent, of the population of India are of the Brahm an io religion, nineteen per cent. Mus sulmans, three per cent, of Animistic or aboriginal forms of worship, and 0.80 per cent, arc returned an Chris tians. ' Otto Wells, a full-blooded Coman che, who entered the Carlisle (Pcnu.) Indian School in a blanket as a boy pupil, stood up in a dress suit at tho school the other day to he married to Miss Pnrkhurst, an Oneida girl. So fnr ns Lo is concerned civilization is not a failure. / The street railroads of New York C'itv had, until the introduction of tho cable system, '20,000 horses in service, and the total number of horses and mules on American street railroads was not far from 400,000. Now, with 7000 miles of trolley roads, and over 1500 of cable, there is decidedly less demand for horses and mules, and correspondingly smaller demand for bay for fodder. It has been decided by nu English court tlint it is not libellous to call a lady a woman. This recalls the fact to tho New York Tribune that in a Western town a couple of years ago a young woman who worked as a clerk in a drvgood store threatened to sue a newspaper for libel because it referred to her as a saleswoman and not as a saleslady. She did not carry out her intention, however, as she was ad vised that she had no ease. About ten years ago a number of Germans, who had migrated to the Northwest, disgusted with the hard ships of (hat cold country, determined to remove to the South. They accord ingly bought at $lO an acre a worn out plantation of some 2000 acres in Lauderdale County, Alabama, and settled there. They proceeded to im prove their property along practical and intelligent lines. They cleared away tho broomsedge and planted clover and grasses and began raising cattle. They sold hav ami small grain. They planted orchards and vineyards and utilized tho products in every avail able way. The result is that the St. Florian colony is among the most thrifty and prosperous communities in the State of Alabama. Their land is now worth at least SSO per acre and they are happy and independent. Professor Garner's announcement that his visit to Africa to study tho language of the monkeys has been en tirely successful is necessarily of great interest, observes the New York Times. It is of tho greater interest because lie lias brought back with him two chimpanzees, with whom he "claims" to have established conversa tional relations, and with whom, doubtless, he will consent to converse in public—not necessarily for publica tion, but as a guarantee of good faith. Of equal interest is his statement that when he was anchored out in a cage in the middle of an African forest, eavesdropping on the circumambient apes, he kept a phonograph, and by trick find device induced the monkeys to talk into it. Their remarks will doubtless be ground out again for the benefit of learned societies, in the wheezy and asthmatic tones into which the phonograph converts all sounds. The wages of train-robbery do not seem to the San Francisco Chronicle to be large enough to make the pursuit attractive. Within the last three months there has heeu an epidemic of this crime, but in nearly every case the robbers have been run down and either captured or shot. Even where bloodhounds are not used the fugitive is placed at a terrible disadvantage, as he is usually seeking to escape from men who know every trail and hiding place. Before the day of the telegraph the criminal had some chance of elud ing pursuit, but in the present day of instant communication his lines are not cast in pleasant places. It would make h curious exhibit were one to bring together the profit and loss of train-robbery in a single year. It would be found that the men who ex pend rare skill for weeks in planning a crime seldom realize anything for their pains. An honest, plodding day laborer makes more in a year than one of the higher class criminals who risks life and liberty a dozen times for petty gains. THE KINGS A man said unto his nngel "My spirits are fnlleu through, And I cannot carry this battle ; O brother! what shall I do? "The terrible Kings are on me, With spears that are deadly bright, Against mo so from the cradle Do fate and my fathers light.' 1 Then said the man to his nngel "Thou wavering, foolish soul, Back to tho ranks ! What matter To win or to lose the whole, "As judged by the little judges Who hearkeu not well, nor see? Not thus by the outer issue The wise shall interpret thee. "Thy will is the very, the only, The solemn event of things, The weakest of hearts defying Is stronger than all these Kings, "Though out of the past they gather, Wind's doubt ami bodily pain, Aud pallid thirst of the spirit That is kin to the other twniD, "And grief, in a cloud of banners, Aud riuglettod vain desires. And vice, with the spoils upon him Of thee and thy beaten sires, "Whilo Kings of eternal evil Yet darken the hills about, Thy part is with broken saber To rise on the last redoubt ; "To fear not sensible failure, Nor covet tho game at all, But lighting, fighting, fighting, Die, driven against the wall !'* -Louise Imogen Guiney, in Boston Pilot. ROMANCE OF A RANCH. 1 v OB Mill May were ( i I Sweethearts. 1 ' WLylfvYX Of course thev 1 Vvv\ werc I that's what 1 [®iC.j&J.j\\ they had been . i Jlearning ever since j J —" * £&?]} Bob, n stripling of II ,twenty, had come °"t from Tennes- I Ree " le Texas SPiw qjJ / Manhandle with the j In those days r , M ' ly WftH R bright i r..i . haired, high strung 1 little girl of fourteen, whom Bob never | called or thought of ns "red headed." Bub wiih n strong, good humored boy, not a bit afraid of work, and be I bad n way with him that gave him com mand of men nnd crentiires. He rose rapidly in old man Love's employ from simple cow puncher to wagon boss, then foremnu ; and when he was only twenty-five went with the approval and good will of his employer to take the position of rauch manager for a Bos ton com nan v. All the world loves a lover. Bob was such a whole henrted one, his state of mind was so patient, he took much de light in it, wore liis chains with such open pride nnd enthusiasm, that all the Panhandle felt with and for him. Besides being a fellow that a girl could love without any difficulty, any body with a daughter to spare might have been pleased with Bob for a son-in-law. And old man Love was pleased enough with the match, and greatly given to bragging of Bob as a coming adjunct to tha I.ove greatness, until the tragedy of the one horned brindle cow, which tore things all up generally, threat ened to sever two loving hearts and darken forever Bob's and May's happy horizon. This old cow—worth perhaps $7 bobbed up at one of the round-ups sporting, in addition to the B. N. of the Boston National, which was facetiously known an the "Bean" brand, old man Love's (XXX). Though very uncommon, such acci dents may occur in the haste and con fusion of branding, without necessarily 1 implying dishonesty on some one's part. While they do sometimes re sult in tights and killings, they are easily enough adjusted between reasonable people, since any clever cattleman can readily toll which brand j is of the longer standing. But any cowboy on the range would I have told you that while old man Love I was square enough himself, he was a ! crazy crunk about the sacredness of j 1 his brand. His long suit was to jump I up anil down and swear that it never I ' yet was on anything that wasn't his | 1 own. He invariably claimed an ani- 1 Dial that bore it in addition to an- < other brand (as did his old cowl, how ever-plainly it showed as the newer of t the two, though as a matter of faeth's < branding irons were handled by just as many careless cowsboys as anv 1 other. • , If Bob bail known what that aged and damaged brindle cow was going to coßt him be might perhaps have blinked his obvious duty and let old man Lovt have her—in the face of right and reason. But he was not the man to be backed down by any one, and he dared the worst- and got it! He held the cow for his company, after a tierce contest, and old man ove went home raging, to give his' distorted version of the affair, issue orders that no member of his family ! ?„3T k l ,V r ° f ' Bob - that S re ? lark "gnifioantly 1 that he had far rather see a child of his married to a horse thief than to a person capable of such behavior. Communication be tween the love rs had since been managed, once or twice, by the utmost stealth and secrecy. Having, by his means, been assured of his sweetheart's steadfast ness and readiness, Bob sent her word by one nf her father's cowboys to ride a good horse past the half-way brand ing pen, armed himself with a license, and hung around the Triple X ranch for a week. When May finally found the oppor trinity to slip away in the most care less niunner, with one of the men's sombreros on, and in the face of threatening weather, she received a rapturous welcome from the long-ban ished Bob, and they promptly headed their pouies for Squire Wiley's, just the other side of Roaring Creek, who was supposed to be holding himself in j readiness for their visit. What Mexican, or other paid spy, or what unfriendly or envious hand carried the news to old man Love will i not be known, but ho burst into one J of his nesr cow camps at dinner, short ly after Bob and May's departure, like a roaring South African lion with mustard in his eye. "The boys"—who knew well enough what was afoot and -what would be asked of them—dropped their tin cups and plates, jumped on their waiting ponies, and were out of hailing dis tance before he fairly lit in their midst* But old Hank Fearsall, the cook, was a new man, not long from South west Texas, neither knowing of, nor caring particularly, for Bob Holly and bis love affairs. So he stood at his official post at the tail end of the chuck wagon und gave amiable atten tion to the impassioned harangue and singular antics of this new and enter taining employer. Being commanded to come along and assist in dispersing Bob ami res cuing May, he mounted a serious ap pearing but fitful tempered buckskin colored pony, with one white eye aud much symmetry of bone—as much of a character in its way nj Hank was in his—and started, with considerable interest ami curiosity. i They rode hard, And were near over- I hauling the lovers within H mile of I Roaring Creek. But while pursuer and pursued pushed on ut their ut . most pace, another factor was coming 1 with a hundred times greater speed to take a hand in the game. The dry bed of Roaring Creek was just before them, beyond that a tiny rise, then an arroyo, and beyond that, again, the roof of the justice's house, i just iu sight. As Bob and May clat tered over t lie creek bed, and scrambled up onto the rise beyond, both looked back, and tlieir ponies stopped, tossing their heads, pricking their ears ami snorting at a curious humming sound that suddenly seemed to till all the air , about. "Hurry up, darling," cried Bob, throwing out a hand to catch May's ; " 'tis a big storm coming from above but before they could descend the slope to cross the dry arroyo in front, it was running from bank to bank, and brimming over with a sudden flood of red, muddy water. ; And, even above the noise of the flood before them, they heard a Round | like the angry shouting of furious i multitudes. Looking backward ami I up the creek, whence the souuds came, they saw a great tumbling shudder wall pushing before it and bearing upon its crest all imaginable sorts of debris advancing down the dry' creek bed with such a thunderous onslaught that the little mound on which they stood shook and seemed fairly to lower under their feet. ! They looked about them. The ar | royo ran into the creek below. Above i both it and the creek luul flooded out until they joined. Their little mound , was an island, momentarily growing smaller, surrounded on every side by j raging torrents, in which were driven l and whirled whole trees, full grown cattle, with sometimes a fence post whose trailing w ire had caught in their barbs all manner of ghastly wreckage. I Up came the water übout them ; down fell the liar!. "It's a cloudburst above, darling," said Bob. "It won't last long—the water won't cover this rise." "I'm not sfraid, Bob," said May, with very white lips; "I'm glad I came, anyhow, If we've got to die we'll die together ; aud the way I've felt for the last three weeks I'm sure that's a heap better than living apart." Bob jumped off his pony and lifted May from hers. The hail was coming bigger and beat cruelly upon them. J He wrapped his slicker about her, I pushed the ponies close together and I sheltered her with them aud his owu | body as best he could. "We won't die," hesaid ; "but, poor little girl, what an awlul atorni I've dragged you out into 1" Just then from the further bank of the creek, above the awful howling of the storm, came this intelligent com mand in old man Love's ear-splitting tones: "May Love, you come here to me this minute 1" And May laughed hys terically. "Well, he can't get at us, anyway, but the hail can. Oh, look to your poor hands! Oh. Bob, I can't bear it. Put the slicker back on." "Why, honey," said Bob, as the tears came in earnest now, "I'd get pounded just the same anyhow, and I you must let me have the comfort of keeping some of it off you—it ain't a patehin' on the way your pa would wm 6 I COuld et me rl gkt now." While the storm raged and the water rose nearly to their feet, Hank Pear , sail had the almost exclusive benefit of | old man Love's remarks, since only his wildest shrieks reached the young ; couple, who werc too much absorbed in each other to heed either him or the storm. These remarks disagreed with Mr. Pearsall, who was notoriously a man of judgment and observation. "What's the matter with that young feller?" he queried angrily; "watch him a standin' to the north'ard uv his KI, a keepin' the hail often her ! Ho ain't no chump! If he keeps that lick np right through he'll make a better husband n' what you ever did !" About this time, the hail ceasing, the expectant Justice came down to the further bank of the arroyo. The water was going down visibly but its roar was Mill considerable. "Ho, Hub! ' yelled the Justice above the sound, "got yer license?" I Boh took it out and waved it above | his head. Old man Love could not, from where he stood, hear a word; but he sur mised what had been said, and the sight of the document was like as the red flag to the bull. 'I dare ye to marry Vm," he screamed. "I dare ye to do it!" And in an ecstasy of rage and anxiety he forced his pony down into the foaming creek, among the whirling drift, where ho was promptly pitched off by the terrified creature, which instantly re turned. Pcarsall, at the risk of his own life, had to fish him out, receiving plenty of abuse for his pains, and re turning it with biting irony. In two minutes' time the shallower arroyo was fordable, though the creek, down which big drifts continued to come, was not. Bob sat May on her pony, mounted his own, and prepared to ride out. The sight of the Justice a plaius cupid, with boots, slicker and cowboy hat—preparing to take charge of the pair, was too much for old man Love, and, dismounted as he was, he plunged iu a delirium of rage into the creek, sputtering and yelling: "Stop! Hold on ! You just dare !" May hesitated, frightened, but Hank Pearsall yanked her father out again and set him on dry land, snorting: "Doggone ye! I pulled ye out onct before! What fer cain't ye stay out! Huh? When ye try buckin' agin a boy like that, backed by a Texas norther, you're agoin' to git left —don't ye know it? That kid's got a double cinch on Proverdunce? Bet ye he had this liyer storm staked out! Go it feller! Go it gal! I'm with ye every time—l'm fer ye ! Yer the right sort! I wouldn't hender ye fer all the old snake bit fools in Texas 1 I'll jist gether up the scraps o* this ole eejit | an' tote 'em back to the ranch." | And as May and Bob rode off, tat -1 tered, beaten, draggled, but oblivi ously blissful and jaunty, a faint hail followed them : "Goodbye, kids: wish yer joy! Come on, ole calamity I"—New York Herald. KUo and Fall of Clipper Ships. Clipper ships were first built in 1840, at the time when English steamships were beginning to take business away from the Yankee packets. The latter I had been the rulers of the seas from j the establishment of the Black Ball line in 1816. That was just after Uncle Sam s rights on the high seas had been vindicated by the outcome of the War of 1812. The first clippers were built for speed, regardless of carrying ca pacity, but were not very profitable, I because of their small freight and their structural weakness. i i They were culled into being by the i | demands of the California trade, and i in 180 l the secret of building swift ships that were also stanch and ca pacioils was solved by the Challenge, ' the Invincible, the Comet and the ; Swordfish. These vessels were of enor mous size for those davs, the Challenge I being of 2000 tons, and their appeur • , ance was beautiful in the extreme. | The arrival in the Port of New York of ■ a clipper that had won repute as a fast ■ ; sailer always excited the wildest and most patriotic enthusiasm. She caused I corresponding emotions of chagrin when she touched at British ports. Nor was the advantage altogether sen timental, for the swift Yankee ships could command much higher freights than slow British vessels, SOO a ton freight being readily paid to American | skippers from China to Liverpool, while S2O was thought euough for En glish masters. Had it not been for the j fact that the English were first to use iron in building steamships, and the j destructive work of the Alabama during • the Civil War, America might yet be an j preme on the wave.—New York Times. Animal and Invalid Diet. Foods that will keep a well person I healthy may kill the sick. On a diet of beef tea, which will build up an in ■ valid, healthy men rapidly lose their strength. Bare, juicy beef, which is the most nutritive of all meats, and i which nourishes the healthy, is the least nourishing of all foods for the sick person, whose feeble stomach can assimilate no part of it. The nutri tive power of milk is very much un derestimated. There is more nourish ment in a pint of inilk than there is in a quarter of a pound of beef. But this is uot the whole question of inva lid dieting. Chemistry has far less to do with the subject than the patient's stomach, which must have not what is most nourishing, but what it can as similate with the least exertion. The food that a sick person likes and hun gers for is invariably what nature re quires. The perfect animal may be fed, the invalid must be fostered with simple but delicately served morsels. The cheek of a broiled lamb chop, a checker of toast, a spoonful of jelly and an eggshell of hot milk—those are the dainties that provoke' appetite.— New York World. Canning Rug Repairers. There are in this city two Armenians who make a living by repairing Orien tal rugs. This work requires a special tact, because these rugs are all made by hand, each bit of the warp being tied to tho woof with the fingers. Fre quently they are obliged to cut a full width piece out of the middle of a rug, and join the edges, and unless they break into a figure the new joining is hardly noticeable. —New York Sun. A Freak ol Lightning. A table in a house was apparently set on fire by lightning, although the lightning itself did not strike the house. The explanation offered is that spark* from inducted currents from the lightn:ngdischarge passed between the fine metallic threads which were woven into the tluffy material of cot ton and wool used for ornamenting the table und that, the sparks set the cot ton on fire. - Kleetrical World, SELECT SIFTIXUS. Portugal's royal crown is worth 16,500,000. An Arctic owl was recently captured in Freeport. Me. A man in Norway, Me., raised nine large pumpkins from one seed. A Philadelphia hat dealer says his least profit is in selling silk hats. On an average a locomotive engineer travels 20,000 miles irx tho course of a year. J. A. Mcßrayer, of Anderson, Kv., has killed 237 rattlesnakes in seven years. A bald eagle was shot off the steeple of the biggest hotel in HewartlCounty, Kansas. Iu the year 760 A. D., Pope Paul I. •cnt the only clock in the world as a present to Pepin, King of France. Needles were first made with every rude machinery in 1545. At that date a workman did well if he turned nut ten a day. Boman colonial coins bore a number of banners corresponding to the num ber of the legion whoso veterans had occupied the country. One variety of the India rubber tree (Ficnselastioa) lias leaves of the deepest green, each provided with a narrow border of very bright red. The loftiest volcano is Popocatepetl, Mexico. Its crater is 1000 feet deep and three miles in circumference. The mountain is 17,784 feet high. The longest wooden bridge in the world is a trestle work over Lake Pont chartrain, New Orleans. It is of cypress piles and twenty-two miles long. The dogs which Chinese epicures are 6aid to be most fond of are n peculiar species of canine noteworthy for the , entire absence of any disposition to bark. The mountain of Fnjisian, in Japan, is actually in motion. It is 12,400 feet Above sea level, yet the power of the winds iu those quarters causes it to sway from side to side. One of the largest wire cables ever made has been completed by a Liver | pool firm. The rope lias a continuous ! length of four and one-half miles and j weighs over twenty-3ve tons. Notless than fifteen hundred (1500) j people were trampled to death in the crowds which gathered at the fete | given in celebration of tho marriage | of Louis XVI. of France, June 2), 1770. In computing the age tho Chinese j always reckon back two years from the I celebration of the first birthday ; or, j in other words, as though the person had been one year old at time of birth. Mount De Angus, otherwise the ; "water volcano," is situated about twenty-five miles south of the capital of Guatemala. It takes spells of vomit ing immense torrents of pure, cold j water. Caged lions and tigers, pumas and | jaguars take no notice of the men and | women passing in front of them, but i let a dog be brought anywhere near I the cage and they show their savage ' nature at once, and spring up, glaring I out savagely. Savage Precautions Against Poison. In Madagascar thingH are going all wrong, according to the latest infor mation. The foreign affairs of the country are disturbed by reason of the unfriendly relations of the Malagassy Government with the French Resident- General; and domestic affairs are kept in a state of suspense and anxiety on account of the mental and physical condition of the I'rimo Minister, Rainilaiarivony. It is known that this man, who is the husband of Queen Rauavalo, is the real sovereign of the great African island, and that he has [ managed to be something more thau a Prince Consort in his relation to the politics of the country. Unfortunately, since the plot against his life, con cocted by one of his sons, assisted, it is alleged, by Mr. Kiugdon, a supposed British political agent, Rainilaiarivony has lived in perpetual dread of being poisoned. He is an old man, extremely shrewd, and he is taking extraordinary precautions against his enemies. Every day. morning and evening, there may bo seen passing along the road leading from the palace to tho market place a a strange group composed of Radilfera, a son of the Premier ; Ratiloferor, his grandson and heir presumptive; Ra kotomena, a nephew of the Queen, and some other near relatives. On the passing of these high personages, amid the cries of "Tanila! Tanila!" ("get out of the way,") everybody makei room and uncovers respectfully. They carry beneath their lambas, or long, shirt-like vestments, the pigeons and the milk which are now the daily food of the Prime Minister. Rainilaiarivony himself places the pigeons under the bedstead, and if no suspicious disorder attacks them with in forty-eight hours he cooks and eats j them. As to the milk, it JB tasted ' daily by twelve persons, and not until I the following day, when he has seen I again these persons in good health, does the Premier drink it. He spends I bis days in playing with toys, and is j represented as having fallen into sec ond childhood. State business is BUS- ' pended, and merchants experience great delays in securing the necessary permits for the transportation of their : goods from one point of the island to another. —New York Tribune. Beer Hunting On n Bicycle. An Oregon man claims to be the first person to go deer hunting on a bicy cle. The inflated tire on his wheel a! lowed of his traveling swiftly am) noiselessly over thegronnd strewn with pine needles and before he peddled many miles he came upon an unsus pecting deer quietly browsing just ahead of him. He killed the animal and returned to the hotel with it sluna over his shoulders.-Chicago Herald ! GETTING OUT MAHOGANY. A PROFITABLE, BUT HARD AND DANGEROUS BUSINESS. The Valuable Logs Are Obtained From the Tropical Forests of Nicaragua. T T SCHNEIDER, of Nica fagna, is stopping at the j 1 JL Hotel Royal, says the New 6 Orleans Picayune. The gentleman is an extensive expor ter of mahogany from the country I where he has resided for the past few I years, and where he lias amassed a ■ competence in shipping that particu lar and valuable wood. "Mahogany is a very valuable wood, but is hard to get out of the forests where it growp," he said to a reporter last night. "However, it pays if one goes at it right, and knows how to manage the business. The way we go about the work of getting out mahog any logs is, first, to get a concession from the Nicaraguan Government. You must 'stand in,' as they say in the United States, if you get a concession, but an enterprising citizen from our country cau go there and establish himself in the favor of the officials, and if he has a good record at home as a man able to tend to business they grant him a privilege. But that is only the beginning of the trouble one has in cutting and exporting the wood. You then proceed to make bargains with the natives to cut and haul logs out of the forests. If you treat them kindly they will work for you for a ! time at the least. The best Indian I labor costs about fifty cents per day. j It is often hard, however, to get them j to work, as they live on fruits, and 1 can sustain themselves without labor !of any trying kind. Half of the year is called the rainy season, and it rains I from May to October. It is then so wet that one finds it impossible to get ont any timber, and no one will . work for you during the wet sea j sou. When the dry season opens we I commence operations, and if we can I get enough labor we succeed, but we j have to be careful with thein, as they : become easily misled and often think j we are taking some advantage of them. ! When they become convinced that ' something is wrong, whether they have j cause to believe that such is the case or not, they get angry, and the feeling j spreads among all the tribes. The | woods are so dense and the work so 1 trying on men brought there from other countries that they cannot stand | it, and there is no profit in paying ! them what they require to risk their ! lives among the snakes and iu the swamps where the mahogany grows. I When the timber is cut we haul it, one log at a time, on a two-wheeled oxcart i especially made for the purpose. It is a very slow process, but it is the only practicable way to get the timber out. ! There are 400 and 500 logs to the acre, j and the price of the wood is so high I partly because the timber is so hard I to obtain." "What is the price of mahogany?" "The average price of a good ma hogany log is $75. I sell very few logs j in the United States, and my principal market is in France. There I ship I practically all my timber. The price i is better in France, and the money is ! paid as soon as the logs arrive iu port. : There are not as many fortunes in ma- I liogauy as some people imagine, as tho ; wood is too difficult to draw from tho | tangled forests of Nicaragua. When a man from the North goes to Nicara -1 gua he stauds the climate very well for a year, and is very energetic, and won* j ders at the spirit of laziness that pre vails among all the people. But after awhile he is overcome by the climatic conditions and gets lazy and is unable !to work three good hours a day —if he i doesn't die in the meantime. The ma | hogany business is very pretty to talk I about and very nice in theory, and j even in price, but a great deal of the fancy profit that apparently accrues i on logs is lost in the time and expense one is required to undergo to get the | logs out and carry them to the ships." ('heap Lodging Houses Abroad. j One of the City Councilors of Lon ! don told me recently with justifiable | pride of the wonderful success that bos ; followed the establishment of a mu -1 nicipal lodging house in London. He j says it is absolutely clean, the linen is spotless and the rooms are more like those of a club than of a public insti ! tution. The charge for lodging for a ! night is five pence, or ten cents, and j this gives the lodger the right to cook I his own food in the place. London was not the originator of this system |of public lodging houses, but fol | lowed an example set some years ago by the enterprising city of Glasgow, ! which has ten lodging houses, nine for men and one for women. These, too, are organized somewhat on the prin ] ciple of a club and beds with one sheet are provided for seven cents and beds | with two sheets for nine cents. The i thrifty Scotchmen have succeeded in | making these institutions pay over j four per cent, on the investment, and ' I haven't any doubt that publio lodg- 1 ing houses on the same plan would pay a good deal better in New York.— New York Mail and Express. Chinese Executions.' At Canton, China, the average num ber of executions is about 800 per year, but in 1885 50,000 rebels were beheaded. Females are sometimes strangled and the worst criminals are nailed upon a cross. Sometimes tho sentence directs that the criminal while living shall be cut into a number of pieces, which number never ex ceeds thirty-six. The headsman for merly received $4 a head, but the sup ply and competition has reduced the wage to fifty cents apiece. Most of the criminals who are beheaded are water pirates or land bandits.—Chi cago Herald. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. ftOUOHNUTS IX nnYMB. Ono cup of sugar, one cup ol milk Two eggs beaton line as Milk ; Salt and nutmeg (lemou'll do) ; Of baking powder, teaspoon* two. Lightly stir the flour in ; Loll on pie board, not too thin . Cut in diamonds, twists or rings. Drop with care the doughy things Into fat that briskly swells Evenly the spongy colls. Wntch with care the time for turning r Fry them brown, just short of burning. Roll in sugar ; serve when cool. Price—a quarter for this rule. —Ladies' Home Journal- # CHICKEN TIE. After the chickens are nicely singed' and washed then put to soak in cold salt and water for a while to remove the blood that may not have drained out. Then stew till tender in a stone kettle. Just before taking off mir with ice water your pastry. Pour into an earthen dish the chicken and as much of the liquor as possible without danger of its boiling over.. Put a rim of the pastry around the top of the sides of the dish but do not. put any at the bottom to become soaked and heavy. After thickening and seasoning the gravy to your taste, just before putting on the upper crust place in the centre of the pie au earthen cup to keep the crust from sagging down in the centre and get ting soggy. When the pie is to bo served, the entire upper crust may be removed and the cup taken out. At this time more of the hot gravy may be added.—American Farmer. HOW TO MAKE HOMEMADE CAKES. In large cities the making of cake is almost a lost art. There are many reasons for this, first and foremost of which is the bakery. Then there aro the women's exchanges, where people fancy they can buy just such cakes as dear grandma used to make, but oh, what a delusion and a snare they prove! "The test of the pudding is I in the eating," but the test of bought cakes, either at bakeries or exchanges should be left entirely to their appear ance, for there alone is their merit. I have a friend who makes the most de licious cake I ever tasted. One of the best and . easiest made of her almost endless variety of cakes is what she calls a luncheon cake. This is how it | is made: One cupful of sugar, one-half cup of ( butter, worked to a fine cream; one egg: one cupful of sweet milk; two ! cupful* of flour ; three teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Flavor with grated nutmeg. Hake in a shallow pan well | lined with buttered paper. Sometimes she frosts the top of this cake and decorates it with English walnut meats. Then she calls it re ception cake. Another of her cakes is what all children love. She call* it ; sponge cake. One large cup of sugar, four egg* beaten to a foam, three tablespoonfuls | of milk, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one large cup of flour, flavor ! with lemon. This makes a small cake. It should bef baked in a shallow, square pan, and eaten fresh. Another of her cakes is rich and de licious; she calls it wedding cake. Two pounds of sugar, two pounds of granulated sugar, twelve eggs. Beat whites and yolks separately. One cup of New Orleans molasses, three table spoonfuls of cloves, one tablespoon ful of mace, two tablespoonfuls of allspice, one nutmeg grated, a quarter ! of a pound of citron cut in little pieces, four pounds of dried currants, two pounds of flour and one heaping ; teaspoonful of baking soda. | This must be thoroughly beaten and ! mixed and baked four hours in a slow | oven. To frost it heat up the whites I of four eggs to a stiff froth, add pow | dered sugar as long as you can blend i it nicely, also add the juice of one j lemon. Spread this over the top of tho cake nearly an inch thick and aronud the sides half that thickness. Here you have a eakc fit to set be fore a king. It will keep for months. —St. Louis Republic. HINTS FOR HOUSEWIVES, j Flatirons should be kept as far re moved from the steam of cooking as I possible, as this is what causes them to rust. Sandwiches can Vic made some houra before needed if kept in a cool place snugly covered with a damp cloth. They should be piled closely upon a dish. A towel rack made with several arms fastened to a half circular centre, which in turn fastens to the wall, is a convenient place for drying dish towels. When drawn butter separates or de composes from standing too long, add a tablespoonful of cold water or a small lump of ice and beat until it becomes smooth. | In making lemonade strain the juice, and to improve the taste allow a half dozen oranges to every dozen lemons. If desired a few thin rounds of banana may be added. Rapid boiling is the general rule for vegetables and all scum that rises should bo removed. When done drain at once, or the vegetables will lose much of their flavor. The water in which green peas has been boiled should not be thrown away. It has a fine flavor- -the very essence of the peas. A little stock added, seasoned to taste, makes an economical, delicious, wholesome and appetizing soup. Iu boiling chickens for salad put them to cook iu cold water and let them come slowly to the boiling point, ihisprooess makes theni more tender and blanches the dark meat—usually rejected—so it may be mixed with the white, Tho dressing should not be added to the salad until serving time. If mixed long before serving it bo conies watery.—New York World;