FREELAND " TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED KVEHT MONDAY AND THURSDAY. TIIOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE: MAIS STRKXX. ABOYX CEHTU. SRNSCBIPTTOLT KATES. Ono Yoar ....$1 60 Six Months . 75 Four Month. 60 Two M0nt1a............................... 25 Subscriber, .re requested to observe the data following the name on tho label, of their papers. By referring to this they can tell at. glance how they stand on the booh. In thM office. For Instance: G rover Cleveland 28Juncfi6 means that Grover is paid -up to Jnneffl, UK, Keep the figures In advance of the preßentdate. Report promptly to this office when your paper Is not received. Ait arrearages most be r*— when paper is dlsocinUnaed, or collection wfl Mr made In the manner provided bylaw. Montana has chosen the bitter root as tho State flo wor. The London banks havo $1,150, 000,000 locked up at the present time. Berlin is one of the most cosmopol itan of European cities. Though it is the capital of Germany only thirty seven per cent, of its inhabitants are Germans by birth. The army authorities are rapidly getting rid of all Indian enlisted men. At the present rate of discharging them it is estimated that by the end of 1895 there will be none in the serv ice. A Boston school committee h3 raised a great fuss by trying to pre vent the boys' eating pie for lunch. The boys held a meeting and adopted resolutions that they wouhl rally around pie to the death. Judge Colt, of Boston, has decided that the late George H. Corliss, the inventor and builder of the famous Corliss engine was a public man and therefore declines to enjoin publish ing liispioture in biographical sketches. The London Mark Lane Express says: "The only comparison to be found to the present low level of the price of cotton is by going back ex actly forty-six years, when the prioo of middling uplands cotton was six and six-eighth cents. The cheapness was then due to financial and political disturbances—the present cause to overproduction." In the midst of the military crisis the erection of new spinning plants is serenely in progress in China. Some of the mills are being provided with the electric light, and thoro is every probability of an attempt being made to run the spindles themselves by means of eleotro-motive power. In these respects the Chinese are content with nothing but the best and the latest. How the mighty are fallen, muse 9 the New York Observer. The oar of Juggernant goes no longer forth in triumphal but death-dealing proces sion. This year, for the first on rec ord, the Jagannath car at Serumpore, India, failed to find devotees enough to drag it over the usual route. On three successive days attempts were made which ended in failure. The per suasions and threats of tho Brahmins were in vain. "Mr. Peabody, who was an Ameri can," said Dean Hole the other day, "'was one of the greatest benefactors of London. His houses built for and occupied by the workmen are models which every great city would do well to copy. At a flower and plant ex hibition in London which I attended four or five years ago I was surprised and delighted to findthatalargo num ber of tho prizes for the best plants went to people who were dwellers in Mr. Peabody's houses. That shows what a better atmosphcro will do for the working classes. Public gardens and parks and workingmen's clubs, I think, are always conducive to tem perance. But people will never bo made temperate by constraint. To secure temperance is impossible by mere human obligations and vows. Force of common sense, conscience and SDiritual influence are ueeessarv." Police Methods in St. Louis. A policeman in St. I,ouis encounter ed u sleep-walker who was on the street at night in liis night shirt, and after arousing him took him to liis room and made him dress. This done, the citizen was marched to tho police station, where he protested indignantly against his arrest, offering as an excuse for his appernnee when taken into cus tody that he was a somnambulist. With inuoli display of authority in ills voice, the police official replied he didn't care what church the prisoner belonged to, it was against a city ordinance to walk the streets without nny clothes on. The somnambulist was finally allowed to go without being fined.—Baltimore Sun. THE MERRY SIRE OF LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BT THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. The Hired Girl of the Orient—Good Evidence—Getting Along Slowly —His Treat, Etc., Ktc. Japnn's the mortem hired girl, A Nora or a Dinah ; Whoso pnthwny, through tho work sho docs, Is strewn with broken Chiun. —Detroit Free Press. GOOD EVIDENCE. "Why do you think ho is a crank?" "He says I am one."—Puck. THE CREATURE AND THE CREATOR. Poet—"Why is it you Jove my poetry and do not love the poet?" She—"Because you are poor and the poetry is not."—Detroit Freo Press. GETTINO ALONG SLOWLY. Mrs. Dix—"Have you met the peo ple yet who have moved in next door?" Mrs. Hicks—"N—No; I don't oven know yet how much rent they pay." —Puck. HOW HE GOT BLIND. Tramp- "Pleaso holp tho blind." Passerby—"How did you becomo blind?" Tramp—"Looking for work, sir." —Dallas (Texas) Times-Herald. SHORTENING THE AGONY. "What in thunder have you invited Somers to speak at your dinner for? He can't talk at all." "That's just why we put him down for a speech."—Chicago Record. HIS THREAT. Mama—"lt is no use; sho is de termined to marry him." Papa--"Very well; tell lrer that I will support them in the style to which he has been accustomed." —Puck. AN ACCOMPLISHED ARTIST. First Restaurateur—"How do you like your new chef?" Second Restaurateur—"Oh, he's a daisy ! He can servo up hash uuder seventeen different names."—Puck. DEPENDS. Herdso—"They say every hearty laugh adds a day to one's life." Saidso—"That depends; I had at least a week kicked out of me for laughing at a man who fell in the mud."—Puck. A WISHED-FOR OPPORTUNITY. "What do you think of my daugh ter's execution, professor?" ask the fond mamma, as her fair daughter pounded away at tho piano-keys. "Think, madam?" was the reply, "why, that T should like to be present at it."—Tit-Bits. A FINE OPPORTUNITY. Modest Youth—"l have only 85000 a year, sir, but I think I can support your daughter on that." Father (enthusiastically) "Sup port her, my dear boy? Why you can support her entire family on it."— Detroit Free Press. HE KEPT HIS WORD. 4 1 tell you what it is," said the silly little fish to his long-headed mother, "I havo been following your advice, and letting those nice, plump, juicy worms alone, long enough. lam now going off on my own hook." And he did.—Life. TnE REASON OF IT. Fond Husband— 4 'Somehow, I don't eeeni to be able to enjoy your pies as I did those my mother made for me when I was a boy." Loving Wife—"Perhaps you wouhl, if you hadn't ruinod your stomach by eating so many of those same pies when you were a boy."—Puck. HOW THE PLANS ARE MADiE. "What are you doing?" inquired Hammerfest, as ho saw his friend tip a dry-goods box on ond and proceed to make a sketch of it. "Attending to business," roplied his friend, the architect. "I'm engaged in making a design for a new modern office building."—Chicago Record. A GILDED 80RR0W. Sympathetic Friend—"l am so sorry you were disappointed in your mar riage !" The Countess—"My dear, don't marry a foreign noble. If I could only undo what I havo done I would bo willing to give up all I have in the world, except my title."—Puck. COVERED BOTH CASES. Theatrical Manager—"l regret, gentlemen, that I cannot put your productions on the stage." First Author—"Why not, pray?" Manager—"Your play, you see, is so awfully siinplo." Second Author—"And mine?" Manager—"ls simply awful!" — Fliegondo Blaetter. AN ABUSED GIRL. "Yes, I gave him up," eighod the young woman. "Did he provo unworthy of your affection?" inquired her sympathetic friend. "He—ho became a spelling re former," rejoined tho other, with a shudder, "and signed his name SJorj.' It took all the poetry and romance out of the name. So wo parted."— London Globe. INFORMATION. 4 'Speak and you nro a dead man." Tho pistol barrel gleamed under the noso ot tho patient looking party who was l ecliiungon tho combination sofa. "Do your worst," he cried, leaping to his feet. "I will speak. I demand t> know how in thunder it is you walk ail through this house without falling over the rugs." But the burglar only laughed mock ingly in his faco and climbed out of tho cellar window.—'Detroit Tribune* A CANDID CONFESSION. Father of tho Bridegroom—"Boforo cementing this close relationship 1 think it but right to toll you that I onco had a littlo unpleasantness which involved the IORS of my liberty for n considerable period. Both my daugh ters are, I am sorry to say, rather llighty; my dear wife is suffering from kleptomania and my son was mixed up in a littlo forgery affair. Won't that make any difference?" Father of the Bride—"Not the slightest! From the fact that I am quite in favor of our alliance you may judge how matters stand in my fam ily."—Dcr Schalk. Steam as a Means ot Defense. A simple and effectivo method of ro pelling train robbers by discharging jets of steam upon the attacking party has recently been patented by William H. Reeve, an old tugboatman, of New York. The inventor lias enlarged upon the plan long followed by rail road companies of attaching a steam jet to locomotives to scare cows and other animals from the track. Tho patent provides for running steam pipes along tho boiler, ono on either side from the cab forward. The ends of tho pipes are supplied with small nozzles so formed that jets of steam may be projectod through them a dis sance of fifty or sixty feet. It is claimed that these would prevent any person from approaching nearer than this distance. Similar pipes could be run to tho rear of the train and be supplied with nozzles, rendering it impossible for any one to reach tho rear platform. Other pipes could bo arranged at the car doors, whilo by the use of flexible pipes or hose tho steam could be carried and discharged from the windows at will. These pipes need not be so large as to bo un sightly or inconvenient in any way. A further use of steam as a means of defense, tire inventor claims, would be in protecting banks against thieves. Since banks are usually heated with steam, tho attachment could readily bo made. Small jets of steam might bo so arranged at tho windows of tho tollers that they could be projected into tho faces of tho robbers. These jets might bo operated by hidden levers or by electrical attachments. A more nmbitious plan, however, is to utilize steam in tho defenso of forts, armories or arsenals. Powerful jets of steam could bo discharged at i doors and windows of arsenals. Forts conld be protected in a similar man ner, and as long as tho supply of steam held out, tho inventor claims, j they could not possibly bo carried by I assault.—Scientific American. Ho Never Served. William Rufus King (born April 6, 1786 ; died April 18, 1853) was a Vice- President of the United States who never served in that capacity, and ono who took tho oath of office on foreign | soil—something which can bo said of no other executive officer which lias ever been elected by tho people of this country. King was an invalid, but his friends urged him to take second place ou the ticket with Pierce in 1552. Both were elected, but Mr. King's health failed so rapidly that ho was forced to go to Cuba early in 1853, some two and a half months bo fore inauguration day. Not having returned to tho United States by Mnrch 4, Congress passed a special act authorizing tho United States Consul at Mantanzas, Cuba, to swear fciui in as Vice-Pregidont at about the hour when Pierce was taking tho oath of office at Washington. This arrange ment was carried out to a dot, and on the day appointed, at a plantation on one of tho highest hills in the vicinity of Mantanzas, Mr. King was made Vice-President of the United States amid the solemn "Vaya vol con Dios" (God will be with you) of tho Creoles who had assembled to witness the unique spectacle. Vice-President King returned to his homo at Culiuw bn, Ala., arriving at that place April 17, 1853, and died tho following day. His remains were laid to rest on his plantation, known as Pine Hills.— Chicago Times. Remarkable Brand on a Horse. Sometimes it takes about as much ingenuity to read a brand on an ani mal after it is written as it does to think it up before hand. This is es pecially tho caso when tho designer gives up letters and figures and tries to represent some object, for the puncher is not always a strictly first class artist. Not long since 1 saw a horso that seemed so weighted down with the burden of the letters orna menting tho whole of one of his sides that ho had littlo strength for any thing else. Ho read as follows: U. S. I. C. S. (X.) This brand was a complete record of his history. In his younger days he had been bought for our cavalry serv ice and branded U. H. After a while ho was worn out, and then received the additional 1. C. for "inspected and condemned." When the Govern ment sold him it was recordod by an "S," and the man that bought him added the (X). If he is sold any more his next owner will liuvo to begin branding him on the other side. Tho United States army officials will not purchase a horse that already has a brand on it. Whether it is Mccuuse they consider branding an inhuman, devico, or because they do not want • horse to disligured, or because tboy need all tho space lor IIIPT own brands, I do not kuow. —bt. Louie Globe-Democrat. TO CIVILIZE INDIANS. QUEEREST NEWSPAPER ISSUED IN AMERICA. Published in n System of Shortlinnd In British Columbia by a Missionary —lndians Readily Learn to Read the Characters—lts Circulation. Work of u Priest One of the most wonderful achieve ments of any age is the invention or provision of some means or language by which a com mon education,and lnore especially the teachings of Christ, lnay be conveyed to an ignorant and semi-heathen face. Ever since the days missionaries have I Ens LB JEUNE. bCOU SCUt fOl'th for this purpose, and, strange as it may com, while we are dispatching miss ionaries to foreign, unenlightened lands, foreign missionaries take up their habitation among the Indians of North and Northwestern Canada. In the year 1879 Pere Jean Marie Raphael Le Jeune came to British Co lumbia as missionary priest, and iu a few short years he has accomplished what might have taken civilization in her generally impeded progress in this thinly inhabited province a half cen tury to bring about the same effect. Pore Le Jeune made his first acquaint ance with the Thompson Indians in Juno, 1880, and has lived with them iver since. A man gifted with a keen, sparkling intellect, and reared with refinement and education in Plcybcrt Christ, Finistere, Franco.he takes tip NORTH BENO INDIAN WOMEN, and was able to express himself in these tongues in a very short time. All the elements of education he found when he first came to this forlorn coun try was that a dozen or more Indians knew a few prayers and the catechism in tlie Thompson language. Beyond lliis they were us ignorant as brutes. Henceforth ho took up his great phil anthropic work. From 1880 to ISS2 he traveled only j tils abode in a lonely, cheerless country among a tribe of Indians who know aothlng outside their provincial jar gon of Chinook language to devote the remainder of his life toward lifting lip a hopeless and down trodden race and to establish between these brethren iml their Maker a divine faith. Pere Le Jeune at once began to study the Chinook and Salishan languages, between Yale and Lytton, a distance of fifty-two miles, trying to make ac rpiaintance with as many Indians as would receive a white man into their habitations. Ilis struggles and efforts were many, for it is well known that those Indians are both stubborn and superstitious, aud to this day there ex ists between the reds and the whites that smouldering enmity which may it any moment break out in treachery and foul play. To reach their hearts was to become one of them—learn their languages and advance civilization among them through the comprehen sion of their own tongue. This of course required untiring patience and energy, but Pore Le Jeune is at last rewarded for his sacrifices, for now hundreds of Indians look up to him as the means of bringing into their narrow settle ments news of tlie great outside world. Since 3882 his mission has extended to tlie Nicola Indians, who also speak the Thompson language, and to the Douglass Lake Indians, who are a branch of the Okunagan family, where lie copied and revised most of the pray ers they have 111 use up to the present day. Since June, 1891, he has had to deal with the Shushwap tribe, and as their language is slmular to tlmt used by other Indians, he very soon became familiar with it. In 1892, the Fraser Indians and sea-coast Indians came un der his notice. lie tried several years ago to teach the natives to read and write in the English language, but without avail. He soon found the race very Impatient and Impetuous, and it [ was an utter impossibility to teach them to speak, read or write, or even to write their own language in English characters. Everything they did learn, they were required to memorize by repeating it over and over again, and as soon as their instructor was out of sight the Indians either neglected their lessons altogether, or, in sheer in ability to learn forgot the first rudiments taught them. As Pere Lo Jeune's district was so extensive and as he could only visit each tribe threo or four times a year, one can see how difficult it was to impart any solid in struction. It took years after years to make them understand a few instruc tions, only to be forgotten as soon as ho was gone. When every means had been ex hausted and the priest was discouraged almost to complete dejection, a happy thought struck him, and by that thought hundreds of Indians in Brit ish Columbia to-day have profited and taken their first step toward education. Why not ftivent a system by which the most simple mind might be taught to read and write? When, In 18(37, Pere Le Jeuue was a boy of 10, In France, he learned a system of shorthand. This he now re sumed, and by simplifying It to meet his own requirements, undertook to tench It to the Indians. The first trial was nu instant success. This short hand is an easy phonetic writing, and can be learned thoroughly in a few weeks. Le Jetine himself was surprised fit the eagerness displayed by the na tives to learn it. Four years ago, a poor Indiuu crip ple named Charlie Alexis Mnyoos, from the lower Nicola tribe, saw the writing for the llrst time and got the Intuition of the system at first sight, lie set to work to decipher a few Indian prayers, and in less than two months had learned the whole method thoroughly, lie soon began to help the priests by communicating his learning to his friends and relatives. From this time on the Indians took up the system and were anxious to learn 011 all sides. They have now become aware of the priceless benefits derived from an as siduous attendance to their school, and are as eager to receive an education as any white pupil. When on.ee a few In dians know the system in one camp, their ambition is to teach it to others During the summer the progress is slow, but when winter comes they spend whole nights at it. One young Indian, especially bright, took interest in the writing as soon as lie saw It He spent the whole night in repeating the lesson over and over again with two or threo companions, and in two or throe days more completed his studies. In less than a mouth he could read the Indian language as well as the Chi nook, and soon was able to read and write English in shorthand. Not only do little children learn to read and write readily, but even old people study with success. The more advanced Indians under stand the value of the letters and the spelling of the words, but the greatest number begin by reading the words, then the syllables by comparing the words together, and at last come to die letters. They learn by analysis much quicker than by synthesis. After GOO or 800 Indians had learned the system, it became necessary that their interest should be kept up by placing instructive matter before them. As Pere Le Jeune was always ou the go, visiting each camp at intervals only, it occurred to him to edit the Ivamloops Wawa, the strangest little newspaper in America. The Wawa is really a full-fledged newspaper, and it first saw the light of day in the month of May, 1891. "Wawa is an Indian word moaning "talk, speak or echo." Hence the title signifies "Ivamloops Echoes." "Ivam loops," the name of the town in which it was inaugurated, is a Shusliwap word, meaning "the forking together of rivers, in this instance the north and south forks of the Thompson ltlver. The accompanying reproduction is the fac-slmile of the original paper, which proves to be a curiosity in itself. It contains four pages, and is about five by seven inches in size. At present over 1,050 subscribers look forward to their paper. The Ivamloops Wawa is Issued weekly. At the start, when funds were scarce, Pere Le .Teune printed the news on any kind of paper donated for the purpose, and some times the Indians received their news on blue, red, yellow, and again on white material. Tlie printing of the paper Is marvel ous. It is all done by hand, Pere Le Jeune doiug the work originally all himself. At first the news was auto graphed, then duplicated on the mime ograph by the priest during the leisure hours of his missionary labors. As the subscriptions grew larger, a few In dian women were called In to help with the printing, but this did not last long, as the funds were still so low that they had to be discharged, and the work all fell back on the priest again. The first volumes of this wonderful little paper have been bound, copies being sent to the Smithsonian Insti tution; also librariost In the East hold copies as premiums. Some of the original papers were lost or destroyed by the Indians, but as many as could be collected were bound. Many of the pages of the little volume I have in hand and from which the accompany ing cut is taken have been badly torn and soiled by the Indians as they stud ied its text. Pere Le Jeune informs SOME MEMBERS OF THE BKWAMISII BRASS BAND. me lie still lias iu bis possession copies of tbe original volumes for distribu tion. These in a few years, as well as in the present, may be considered valuable curiosities, for now tbe old process mimeographing bas been aban doned and electrotyplng ou a small scale, by which three times as much material appears weekly, bas been sub stituted. Tlie new Ivamloops Wawa contains sixteen pages. Its contents eonscist chiefly of news from the sur rounding towns and wigwams, notices of births, deaths, and marriages of tlie Indians, with a new lesson or two of the system, while a special feature Is made of tlie bible stories and religious instruction. The white settlers ill Kamloops take little or no interest in tlie paper, and the means with which l'ere LeJeune carries on his noble work are either donated or procured by sub scriptions to the little weekly. During tbe winter Indians take infinite delight In sending letters from camp to camp. Kamloops Is situated on the north and south branches of the Thompson Itiver, and the scenery around the quiet little town makes it one of the garden spots of the earth, especially In the summer. In summer, the even ing sunsets are gorgeous, and as far as one can see down the broad, mir rored surface of the Thompson, noth ing meets the eye but the most mag nificent glorious scenes of nature's painting. In this little known region which reaches far away to the lands where perpetual night and everlasting snow are common sights, there Is a touch of romance ami mysticism which cannot be described. The coun try is thinly settled yet. and many a landmark remains which speaks with thrilling vividness of an earlier race. It is a now occupation for them, who till a few years ago did not know what it was to read another man's "talk oil paper," and the idea is so novel that they resort to many amus ing schemes ill order to get correspond ents. Seventy-five to luo natives sent out letters to correspondents whom they never saw or knew. Civilisation, however, has made rapid progress, and those North Am erican Indians are losing much of the ®fil v GROUP OP SIIUSINVAP INDIANS. V primitive savageness, and the early be liefs of idolatry and paganism are giving way to the Christian religion. Customs, manners, and even dress are becoming modern, and in half a cent ury, or long before, every trace of ear lier barbarism will be swept away en tirely. Kamloops of to-day has some 2,000 inhabitants, and is the business center of the surrounding country from twenty-five to fifty miles distant. The town was formerly a Hudson Bay fort or trading post. It began to grow after the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway.—Maibelle Justice, in Chicago Herald. PUSS AND THE SCIENTISTS. Why Does a Cat Always Manage to Land on Its Feet? ~ What, mechanical power makes a eat fall on its feet lias been puzzling the French Academy of Sciences. A series of sixty instantaneous pluotographs ex hibited before it showed the complete process in very stage, and demon f strated scientifically that the cat does turn in the air and does land 011 its feet, but did not betray the motive power. The general impression was that it was due to the leverage obtain ed by contact with the surface from which the cat dropped; so to decide this point a new set of photographs will be taken of a cat dropped from a string suspended in the air. Dr. Marey, the inventor of an ap paratus for making series of photo graphs of nnimals in motion, conducted tile experiment with the French cat in question. Do not fail to observe the expression of the cat's tail in the last photograph. It is eloquent of triumph and of rejoicing after a dauger past. THE busier a man is the harder it is for the devil to get into conversa tion with him. si!lli Bryn Mawr's Freeman class is hard at work on the basket ball field. Mrs. Astor gave a Thanksgiving; dinner to 800 New York newsboys. Ribbons aro profusely used as gar niture for corsages as well as skirts. Susan B. Anthony wants to start a. big daily newspaper exclusively for women. Mrs. P. T. Barnum complains that $40,000 a year does not pay her living expenses. The court plaster patch on chin or, cheek has boon revived by modom "grand dames." Ono of tho most famous folklorists. of tho world is Miss Mary Alicia Owens, of St. Joseph, Mo. About sixty foreign womon liavo been naturalized in New York during the last three years. There aro about 170,000 women in Connecticut. At the recent elections less than two per cent, voted. The wise father of marriageablo maidens will insist on a cozy recessed window seat in his new house. Mrs. Bradley Martin, a New York society leader, has bought the dia mond crown of Mario Autoinottc. Princess Louise, of Denmark, sister of the King, is dead. Blio was abbess of the convent of Itzehol, Ilolsteiu. The Czarina of Russia is an accom plished typewriter. All her family correspondence is indited on that ma chine. Tho Young Women's Christian As sociation of Michigan includes nine teen associations, with a membershii> of 2000. Mrs. Gladstone is cighty-ono years old and she possesses that vigor and vitality which is so remarkable in her husband. Carolus Duran, tho French portrait painter, is to visit New York this Winter to paint the picture of Mrs. George Gould. The Turkish fez for little boys has become fashionable to tho extent of being common. Now mammas look for something new. Twenty-four young womon aro taking graduate courses at Yalo Col lego this term. Tho number is in creasing each year. Velvety collars in all shades and shapes aro very popular this season. Some of these stocks have one largo or two tiny buckles. Miss Isabella Lockwood has been ap pointed Deputy County Recorder at Muuioc, Ind., and tho courts will decide as to her eligibility. Lena McClollan, of St. Paul, Minn., is the youngest stamp collector. She is four years old and pursues her fad with untiring energy and iutorest. Tho women's clubs in and about Waelitngton liavo federated under tho title of "Tho Federation of Women's Clubs of tho District of Columbia." Tho nowest laco pins liavo bullet heads, either iridosseut, green, mauve or deep blue, sold in pairs, unitod by a chain—an old fashion which revisits us. Washington will have among its per manent residents this winter a coterio of not less than a dozon widows of social celebrity and apoplectic bank account. Tha class of '97 at Wollesley is tho most athletic class in the college. Its mombers excol in every kind of sport, and havo earned honors both at homo and abroad. Lillian Russell, tho opera singer, instead of bonbons, keejis a dish of boiled carrots constantly on her dress ing table, and doclaros that they aro fine for tho complexion. Countess Giannoti, who is men tioned as ono of tho favorites among tho ladies in waiting to tho Queen of Italy, in an American, daughter of a cigaretto maker of Newark, N. J. Misses Judson and Lamson, of wealthy Cleveland (Ohio) families, tho former the daughter of a judge, havo joined the Salvation Army, and aro living in the army barracks in that city. Mrs. Oscar Beringer, ono of tho leaders of London literary society, was born in Amorica, and, as she says, can boast of a mixture of English, Irish, Spanish and French blood. Her child hood was patsod in California and Mexico. At a recont bazaar of all Nations, the clover thought was carried out of showing the time all over the world. Above every booth a clock was set that was regulated to tho hour then passing in tho placo represented by the stall. A Miss Storliug, at Avlesford, Nova Scotia, has an industrial farm and schools, established at her own ex pense, where she brings waifs from Scotland, and teaches them how to make a living. She has something like 100 of tho unfortunate children there now. An enterprising organizer has formed a foot-ball team of women in north London. Tho players will bo "professionals" and receive a share of the gate money. It has not been de cided whether the referee shall bo a man or a woman. Tho novel team has already bookod a number of games. The custom of having women pall bearers at funerals will probably bo permanently established here, says the Louisville Courior-Journal. There havo been several of that kind in tho last year. At a recent fuueral the pallbearers were eight young girls, dressed from head to foot in white. The young Indies wore white cups, gloves, dresses and shoes.