FREELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISH Kl> EVERT MONDAY AND THUKSDAY. tTHOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE, SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Year jl ffl Six Months 73 Four Months 60 Two Months 35 Subscribers are requested to observe the date following the name on the labels of tiiei* papers. By referring to this they can tell at • glance how they stand on the books In this office. For instance: Urover Cleveland 28Junefl5 ib cans that Crover is paid up to June 2R, 1806. Keep the tlgures in advance of the present date, lie port promptly to this office when your paper Ms not received. All arrearages must jmJd when paper Is discontinued, or collection will be made In the manner provided by law. ID advertising, always say what you believe, if you wish people to believe what you say. Times are getting distinctly better ID New York. Dress suits are now being rented freely at 50 cents a night. New York is puzzled over the pronun ciation of the name of the famous vio linist, Ysaye. Pshaw! That's easy. If men didn't get sick and tired of boarding-houses there would be very few marriages. Stewed prunes drive lots of victims to matrimony. "W hat most college young men really need when they are out celebrating is some good, competent musical di rector to conduct the yell chorus. Outsiders do not perceive the advant ages of either of the rival cities of Min nesota. A man's nose is frozen as quick ly in St. Paul as in Minneapolis, and vice versa. The fact that two persons have been convicted of fraud in connection with j the claim to the Townley estates will ! not make the English estate swindle j any less popular with American gulls, j Jokes and puus are not to be found in the Bible, the Declaration of Independ ence or the American Constitution, and advertisers cannot afford to be very funny if they wish the public to take what the}' say seriously. More frequent mails for country dls fricts ami their free delivery in ail sot pod townships, is an issue that will 1101 down. So far as possible the country should enjoy equal privileges with large towns and cities. This must be accomplished even if the expense if I partially borne by the cities. Tliej ! draw their very life blood from the country, and their commerce depends | upon agriculture. National develop I merit for several decades now has beer tn a measure at the expense of the rum districts, until the flow of populatlor from country to town is pregnant with grave danger. If the recent elec tions mean anything, tliey moan thai the people want government to take hold in earnest of just such problems as this that so vitally affect the everv , da 3' life of our people right here ai home. Experiments show that rum free delivery would be very nearly self sustaining, but ninety-nine out of y hundred of the American people arc willing that the postoffice departmein run behind a few millions a year, il necessary, in order that the rural re glons may have more mails and free delivery. A simpler classification oi postal matter, a cheap parcel post and a fractional currency for use in the mails are also needed to make our puat office department serve the people an ii should. Let this issue be agitated tin til, if the present Congress fails to ac cede to these demands, they may b< promptly granted by the next Con. gress. Fortunately, no partisanship I* Involved, and it is simply a question oj the people expressing their desire* with sufficient force to compel acquits cence. Birds in Egypt. It is delightful to note the lameness of tlie birds of Egypt. They enter rooms and houses through windows or en-v --ices left for ventilation, and. once in side, hop fearlessly about the floor, picking up stray crumbs* I have seen —and the sight was a pretty one—a sparrow perched on the corner of a table during the progress of a crowded hotel repast; and it is not uncommon to see them flitting across the ceilings of lira wing rooms at Luxor. All birds, from largest to the small est, go unmolested, unless they are definitely useful for food. The great "brown kite sits fearlessly on the roofs of Cairo, hard by his cousin, the crow, .which is not black, like our crow, but is black and gray, and might easily be mistaken for a pigeon. Every garden jit any rate, in I ppcr Egypt has its owl •frequenting a tall palm tree, and hoot- Jug or whistling as Nature guides it Pearls in Paris." The leaders of fashion in Paris have declared that pearls shall be the most fashionable of all ornaments this win ter. Strings of line pearls will be twisted in arid out among the coils of the hair, a happy revival of the styles in vogue in the days of Louis Quinze, when the ladies of France wore their hair powdered and decked with pearls. The use of pearls will not be confined to the hair, however, for they will be worn in every kind of a necklace, from a single bow to a wide collar made in rows of pearls caught together with a diamond clasp at intervals around the neck. A long, slender chain of pearls is another fancy, and this is worn twice around the throat, forming a kind of necklace. It falls in graceful loops to the waist, and is caught at one side of the corsage by a jeweled pin. THE TELEGRAPH* .The darkness .and the silence Ktt Between your soul anu mine. Bike some great river rolling b Beneath a night of stormy sky, Where not a star may shine. But, as beneath the sullen brino 'Twixt lands of kindred speech, There runs a slender, living lino O'er which there flash,by lightning sign, The thoughts of each to each, 80. 'neath the parting flood of death There runs a living lino Of stoadfast memory and faith, Of love not born for mortal breath, Between your soul and mine ! —Samantha W. Shoup, in Independent. AS IN A LOOKING GLASS. I SCENE.— Boudoir and toilet of a society j belle. The belle, who, besides bhing very beautiful, is still young and fresb. is seated in front of her dressing table under the hands of her maid, who is proparing her hair for ' l "° night. On the dressing table arc a mir | rorand various articles of the toilot. | |HE Maid—"Made \f >J moisello was a > V great triumph to / night; no?" "" The Belle (ab jvprfc stractedly)—"Yes, ffISSJ Celeste, I think jTI The Maid (witli if I pr de)--"The men < all fall down and adore mademoiselle; no?" The Belle—"No, not all the men. Somo of them. Enough of them. (Sighing). Too many of them." The Maid—"That is good. Made moiselle has embarrassment of choice." The Belle—"Yes, an embarrassment of choice. You speak truly, Celeste. (Sighing again). It is that which makes me—but, bah ! why think of it all? I suppose it is the experience of all girls like me in society, with a for tune, a face and a facile tongue. There! That will do for to-night, Celeste; I am going to sit up for a little. I may read and I may write, I cannot say." The Maid (horrified) —"But made- j moiselle has already lost so much of the beauty sleep." The Belle—"I am restless. Be- | sides, if all be true that men have j told me to-night, I do not need it. Good night, Celeste." The Maid—"Goodnight, mademoi selle!" (Exit maid). The Belle (alone) —"Fivo proposals in one night. That is, counting one that I suppose does not—ought not to count. Four of them at any rate such as a girl in her second season should jump at. As for the fifth —well, I won't think of it, I mean, if I can help it I won't. Yet.—but what nonsense ! Let me review the others. First came old Totterly. Sixty years old ho said he was. He is eighty, if he is a day. Worth four millions, ho said. That part is probably true. But, oh! Let ns pass on to the next. Philip Eger ton Denning, the writer and thinker ; the literary lion of the season. Funny j ho should fancy me. I like him, too, myself. I cannot help admiring his intellect, and I feel that I should always respect him. Yet—(muses sev eral minutes, then sighs). Who next? Oh, yes. (Laughing heartily). I must not forget him. Lord Tuffnut, the latest British importation, who did me the honor to offer mo, with a monocle in one fishy eye, his title, his mortgaged estates and the family tree that, in its time, has borno an abundance of just such overripe fruit as he is. Anil for what? My youth, beauty, and money. Nonsense. Next. Ahem! The same thing, in a measure, only of our own manufacture. Tracy de Puyster Van Treller, of tho most cerulean of blue blooded Knicker bocker stock. Truly our country has reached a wonderful height in her in dustries when she can turn out any thing so nearly like the English arti cle, even to his morals, as Tracy de Puyster Van Proffer ! There they are, all of them, labelled to the best possi ble advantage. All—except Jack. Poor .lack ! Well, I might as well list him. Jack Willoughby. Something down town. Poor as a church mouse, handsome as Apollo, and true as steel. Ah, well! (sighing) I suppose I must not think of him. It is lucky, though, that somo one interrupted us when ho proposed, or I might have said yes. I was overcome with the lieat of the ball room ; anil when he put his arm around me, and whisperingly begged for an answer, I felt so weak, for the moment, that I don't think I should have had strength to refuse him. But somebody came, somebody always does, and I suppose I am safe. I promised them all an answer iu a week. An embarrassment of choice, Celeste said, (Closes her eyes and thinks.) km A half hour or more passes, during which the belle appears to sleep. Sud denly she opens her eyes. The Belle—"I must have slept. But nothing iu my dreams seemed to offer mo any help. Oh, dear! Is there anything or anybody that can show mo what to do?" A voice—"There is." Tho Belle (startled) —"Good gra cious! What was that?" A Voice—"Don't be frightened. It was I." Tho Belle (still more alarmed) "But who are you? Where are you?" A Voice—"Your mirror." The Belle—"But, good heavens! Mirrors cannot speak." The Mirror —"Mirrors can do a great many more things than people | give them credit for. Wo reflect; i why should we not speak? That we can do so is proved by my talking to you now. I have listened to all you havo thought and would help you." The Belle (trembling)—" Was I thinking aloud?" The Mirror—"No. But you cannot think and look into my face without , every thought being known to me I even though I may not reveal what is in your mind. I want to help you to decide ynr future. Are you willing, that I shuld?" The Belle— "You maun with regard to—" The Mirror (blandly) —"I mean with regard to the live proposals you received to-night." The Belle (after a pause) "Which shall I accept?" The Mirror—"That I may not tell you. I can simply help you to judge for yourself." The Belle (anxiously) "How can you do that?" The Mirror—"By showing you yourself, your surroundings and your condition of mind, five years after your marriage with any one of your would-be husbands of this evening." The Belle—"Oh, dear! This is worse than chiromancy. Wouldn't— eh—wouldn't it be wicked?" The Mirror—"Not so wicked as it would be to marry the wrong man." The Belle—"I suppose that must be true. Well, what must I do?" The Mirror—"First, turndown the gas. Then place yourself facing me, and light the spirit lamp of your curl ing-iron apparatus. Now, take some of your pearl face powder, sprinkle it on the flame, and wait. (She does so. The surface of the mirror becomes heavily clouded). Which would you see first?'' The Belle (laughing hysterically)— "Oh, take them in their regular or der. " The Mirror—"Then, Mr. Totterly, the eighty-year-old millionaire, first. What can. you see? Speak!" (The cloud on the face of the mirror gradu ally clears in the centre, disclosing a picture.) The Belle (in a low voice) —"I see myself, handsomely dressed, covered with jewels, at an evening . reception. Many men are ground me offering me attentions. For some reason T dare not accept them. In a corner, jealously watching me, I see Mr. Totterly. He scowls every time a man pays mo a compliment. Everything is bright ( around me, but the very brightness seems to weary me, and remind me of something lacking." The (grimly) —"Are you happy?" The Belle (shuddering)—" No. Al though bored to death where I am, I dread to go home, because I shall be alone with him, my husband. I see nothing but .despair and waiting, con stant waiting for release." (Picture vanishes). The Mirror —"You will not forget that. Now look upon this. (Again a picture forms). What do you see?" The Belle—"I see myself again, but alone. I have been reading, but have tired of it. There is something I want to do, something I want to*feel, but I cannot. In a little room nearby I see Philip Egerton Denning, my literary, intellectual husband. He is very busy, writing. In my utter loneliness, I get up and go to him. Stooping over, I gently kiss him on the brow. He frowns, pushes me away, and tells me I destroy his ideas. I sign, turn away, and go to bed." I The Mirror (ironically) "Are you | happy?" The Belle (bitterly) "No. AIJ the warmth in my heart is gradually be ing frozen by the cold indiffereuce of the man I have married. He is too brainy to lavish any affections on his wife; his growing fame is more im portant than domestic ties. Show me the next." The Mirror—"Well, what see yon here?" The Belle—"Another reception. I am sitting alone, however, utterly ignored by the many women present except in the way of an occasional supercilious gianco at my gown, or a whisper to some 0110 else about me be hind a fan. I think it must be in England. Some of the women have red noses, and they all look tired and I bored to death." The Mirror—"lt is. It is the fifth year of your reign as Lady Tuff'nutt." I The Belle—"I see myself moving into another room where everybody is playing cards. His Lordship, my husband, is there, gambling like the rest. I tell him J do not feel well and would like to go home. Ho advises me to go home alone or amuse myself in the conservatory. He says there is too much of his money on the table to go then. He means ray money. I have seen enough of this." The Mirror (mockingly) —"Are you happy?" The Belle (sadly) "No, but I am gradually becoming deadened to my misery." The Mirror (as a new picturo ap pears)— "Now you are Mrs. Tracy de Puyeter Van Treffer, a member of the native aristocracy of New York. Can you seo yourself?" The Belle—"Yes. I see myself once more alone. The room is handsomely furnished; everything looks rich and good. But I am waiting anxiously and listening intently. At every sound I get up and look through the blinds into the dark night. At last, as dawn is breaking, a cab drives up; I hear it. A few minutes afterward nty husband enters the room. He scolds me in a thick voico for remain ing up. A quarrel ends in my burst ing into tears. He stoops over mo to kiss me and I nearly faint with nau sea." The Mirror —"Are you happy?" The Belle (fiercely)—" No. I am hu miliated by his neglect, disgusted with his manner of life, and harassed with constant suspicion. I am utterly wretched." The Mirror (slyly)—" There is only one more picture. Do you want to see it?" The Belle (confusedly)—" Yes, I sup pose I may as well. It is probably like all the rest." The Mirror (as the last picture ap pears)— "Then behold ! And tell what you see." The Belle (very softly) —"I see my-, self again. I am sitting in front of a cosey fire of soft coal, sewing some thing light. Near me is—near me is —yes, it is Jack. Mr. Willonghy. I mean. Ho is talking to me very gay ly, and I am smiling and listening. Now the door opens and two children come bounding into the room ; a boy and a girl. They want to bid us good night, they say. They look so mfioh like Jack they might almost be—al most be—his nephew and niece." The Mirror (gently) "Are you happy?" There is no answer from the belle, for she wakes up with a start. The Belle (after looking earnestly at the mirror, which is as bright as crys tal) — "I liavo been dreaming and it is nearly five o'clock. But lam not sorry. An embarrassment of choice, Celeste said. I thought so, too, but we wero both young. I told her I might read nndl might write. (Smiling.) Well, I have read a great denl; I think I will write a little. (Writes.) * My Dearest Jack- I don't think I will keep you waiting a week for my answer. I am yours as soon as you como to claim me. ETHEL. —Life. WISE WORDS. A rogue is a roundabout fool A full jail is better than an empty one. Gossip is generally a desiro to get even. A drop of ink may make a million think. It is a rare mnn who can do a favor delicately. You seldom admire a man you see a great deal of. Bank and riches are chains of gold, but still chains. It is not hard to forgive a lie told with good intent. One drop of scandal will spread over a whole life-time. What we place most hopes upon generally proves most fatal. Everything a man likes to do a woman can prove is wicked. The man who knows the worid and is not a cynic is usually a fool. An evil intention perverts the best actions and makes them sins. In the meanest hut is a romance, if you but knew the hearts there. The fools are not all dead'yet, and, what is more, they never will be. Every human heart ought to be a bird cage with a singing bird in it. Of all virtues justice is the best. Valor without it is a common pest. The happiness of your life depends upon the character of your thoughts. The wise man expects everything from himself; the fool looks to others. The people pay more for love than for any other necessary evil on earth. The mora friends a business man has tho more things he sells below cost. The trouble with most people's economy is that they don't save any money by it. The younger a woman is tho more indignant she is when she hears of a bad husband. It is all right to vote for tho conn try's prosperity, but you must work for your own. What is birth to a man if it be a stain to his dead ancestors to have left such an offspring? A Remarkable Fall ot Stone. M. L. Fletcher, an English mineral ogist, tells of a remarkable fall of stones which took place at sotno early date in the history of Mexioo. He describes fourteen huge masses in all, and advances the very likely theory that they originally formed a single meteoric mass that was shattered by the intense heat engendered while passing through the earth's atmos phere. Tho fragments of this immense meteorite are scattered over a section of country sixty-six miles in length and twenty-two in width, and it is es timated that its total weight was but little short of 20,000 pounds. One piece of it, now in the National Mu seum at Washington.—Atlanta Consti tution. How Horses Sleep. When the horse sleeps, one ear is directly forward, why it is not known. A naturalist thinks this is to guard against danger, being a survival of their original wild habits. He says: "Watch a horse asleep through the window of his stable, and make a faint noise to the front. The ear will be all attention, and probably the other will fly round sharply to assist. Now lot him go to sleep again, and make the same noiso on one side. The forward ear will keep his guard, with possibly a lightning flick round, only to re sume its former position."—New York Dispatch. Tauieil a Pair ol Elk. A Chehalis County (Wash.) farmer has lately been creating a good deal ol interest with a pair of elk which he had tamed and trained to do mnny things usually done by horses. A few days ago a traveler offered him a good price for his elk, but the farmer re fused to part with them. The same night a cougar got into his barn and ate up one of the creatures.—Chicago Herald. "Wroth Silver." "Wroth Bilver," from the several parishes ofhis hundred of Kuightlow in Warwickshire, in England, was col lected a few days ago by the Duke of Bucoleugh as lord of tho manor, Tho custom dates back to feudal times. For every penny not forthcoming the prescribed penalty on the defaulter is $5 or else the forfeiture of a white bull with a rod nose nd ears.—Chicago Herald. - "* 'THE MAN OF DESTINY." STORY OF NAPOLEON BONA PARTE'S WONDERFUL CAREER. % Soldier of Fortune—All tlie World Now Discusses Ills Life and Achievements. Everybody is supposed to be ab sorbed in the first Napoleon just now. I'lie current interest in him is reflect ed in the magazines. For reasons as mysterious as the source of fashion in slothes, he is the prevailing literary fashion. Yet how many know the salient, significant facts in his life? Well, here they are, as given by the New York Press. Napoleon Bonaparte was born near the town of Ajaccio, on the Island of Corsica, on August 15, 1769. Tradi tion credits him with having boon n child of the people, but thut is not so. His father was of the nobility and among the most prominent of Corsicans, although poor and inclined to be lazy. His father's home was a gathering place for political discussion among the Corsican gentry. His boy proved to be violent and passionate, morose and stubborn, lie had a nas ty temper and was bound to have his own way about everything. Muskets and cannon and wooden soldiers were his playthings, just as they are the ehosen toys to-day of the children of Emperor William, of Germany, upon the eldest of whom the future peace of Europe no doubt depends. Napoleon could speak very little French when, at the age of ten, he was sent to a military school at Brienne, where he developed a fond ness for mathematics and a hatred for Latin, devoured Plutarch's lives of heroes who wero not as important in thesvorld's history as he himself after ward became, and achieved a reputa tion for being overbearing and ambi tious. He was reserved and sullen and the big boys made fun of him, while the little ones wero afraid of him. The stories that ho assumed a post of dictatorship over the whole school do not appear to be borne out. In 1784, when he entered the mili tary school in Paris, he found himself moro unpopular than ever. He left the school when he was sixteen, and, upon the death of his father, lie bo camo a sub-lieutenant of artillery. He took a notion to achieve literary honors and undertook to writo a book in imitation of Lawrence Sterne's "Sentimental Journey."guided there to by a young woman with whom he had fnllen in love. Napoleon's first military battle was fought, not only against France, but agninst his native town Ajaccio. He was twenty-threo then, and had taken the side of tho rebels in a Corsican revolt against French rule. He was defeated, besieged in turn, and hail to live on horse flesh for three days before he and his handful of troop 3 were rescued by shepherds. Na poleon's attack on the town made it necessary for his mother and the other children to leave it, so they moved to Marseilles in 1793, Na poleon soon went to Paris, where his Corsican campaign was forgiven in view of the fact that the Government needed trained officers, and he was sent in the same year to tako part, as a colonel of artillery, in tho siege of Toulon, which was held by the Span ish and English. If Napoleon had been content with doing only moderatoly well in this siege tho whole course of history might have been changed, for it was his amazing activity, foresight aud kuowleJgo of military tactics that were chiefly instrumental in causing the fall of tho city and in bringing the young soldier into notice. He was made a brigadier-general of artil lery in consequence at the age of twenty-live, the recommendation for his promotion being worded thus: "Promote this young man, for if he should be ungratefully treated he would promote himself." That was a tribute to his genius, ambition and power of will that makes light of theorios that his subsequent owner ship of most of Europe was consider ably due to good fortune. Jealousy took root in Napoleon's success at Toulon, and |lie was soon afterward thrown into prison on a charge .'of being in sympathy with Robespierre. He was released in a few days, but his prominence had made him an object of intrigue, and he found it difficult to get new mili tary employment. Ho had the blues and wroto to his brother Joseph: "Life is an empty dream, soon to be over with." Ho was completely dis couraged and impoverished, nnd came near ollering his services to the Sultan of Turkey. Ho was ready to fight for or against anybody. His opportunity came when tho Di rectorate, then governing France, stirred up civil war by trying to per petuato itself in power. The people rose against it, and after one general had tried in vain to put down the re bellion, Napoleon was called on to take charge of tho few troops the Di rectorate had at its disposal. His brilliant maneuvers at Toulon wero remembered. In one night he made his plans, and the next morning, when the troops of the people advanced on the Tuilerios they met with a resist ance that amazed them. Napoleon had divined their plan of attack, had prepared for it in the night, and in one hour of fighting he had won a vic tory over troops that outnumbered his own six to one. He was made a commander-in-chief for this success, and then, while wait ing for something to turn up, he met Josephine Beauharnais, a beautiful young widow, who came from the Is land of Martinique. He fell in love with her and married her in 1796, when ho was twenty-seven. In the same year he was given command of the army that had been listlessly try ing to whip tho Austrians, who were contending with France for suprem acy in Italy. With a ragged army of 25,000 ho moved on 60,000 well-drilled men with such suddenness and pre cision that he appeared to have dropped down from the Alps. He de feated them, then another army, then a third, find finally a fourth, and then I proceeded to Austria to attack the en emy on their own grounds. He cut, hewed and slaughtered right and left, men, women and children were sacri ficed to his ambition, and at last re turned to Paris after a campaign of two years, the conquorer of Italy, the humiliator of Austria and the cham pion and hero of France. Nothing was too good for him, and Paris threw herself at his feet. He took his hon ors modestly, and thus saved himself from the reaction which usually fol lows Freuch enthusiasm. In 1798, at the age of twen ty-nine, Napoleon, who dreamed of setting up for himself an em pire in the far East, started out to conquer Egypt and India. He failed, but succeeded in making France believe that the failure was not ignominious, and returned in time to take advantage of the topsy turvey po litical condition of Paris, and to get himself appointed as First Consul of France in 1799. From that time on his career is more familar to those who are now making fashionable talk about it, and it can be sketched in briefest out line. He undertook to make himself master of Europe, first by giving France a better Government than it ever had before, and socondly by or ganizing an army with which to hum ble the enemies of France and to ex tend his glory and power. Apparent ly he accomplished the onf with his left hand while he accom plished the other with his right. Hie judgment and energy werebeyond be lief. The administrative departments of France were reformed almost as sud denly and as surely as the battle of Marengo, by which supremacy in Italj was regained, was won at the same time. Austria, Russsia and Turkey and England in turn were forced tc acknowledge by treaty the position of France among the first class Nations, and then in 1802 the First Consul, the idol of France, was proclaimed Con sul for life, and Napoleon became practically Emperor. Two years later, after further re forms aud incidentally centralization in the Government and the organiza tion of many of the institutions of which France is proud to-day, the Consul was proclaimed Emperor iD name as well as in fact. In 1805 Austria and Russia joined hands to wipe out Napoleon and France. The Emperor jumped in be hind the Austrians, cut them off and compelled them to surrender, and theD and there overwhelmed tho Russian? in the battle of Austerlitz. He prac tically disintegrated tho Germar States by the battles fought with the Prussians at Jena and Auerstadt. He defeated their allies, the Russians, put his brother Joseph on the throne of Spain and then stood forth on the continent of Europe as tho King of Kings in 1808. He divorced Josephine in order that he might increase his power by marrying the Archduchess Mario Louisa of Austria, giving his excuse tho fact that his first wife had borne him no son to whom he could bequeath the imperial crown. He an nexed Holland and Westphalia, and strove to han-ass British ocean traffic, helping indirectly to cause the War of 1812 with the United States. Napoleon's downfall began in 1812, when he invaded Russia. The attempt was a fatal failure, and when his army retreated it was a wreck. In 18W Russia, Prussia and Austria invaded France, the French armies suffered re verses, Napoleon abdicated under compulsion and hurried away in dis guise to Elba. He returned to clutch for the reins of power again in 1815. He was given his final quietus by the Duke of Wellington in tho battle ol Waterloo, abdicated a second time, and was exiled to the island of St. Helena, where he died on May 5, seventy-three years ago. Slack in His Geography. A curious incident regarding a straif occurred during the Russian War. If would have been ludicrous, if nny thing can be ludicrous connected witb war. Commodore Elliott was block ading a Russian squadron in the Gulf of Saghalin, on the east coast of Si beria. Thinking he had the Russian? in a cul ue sac, he complacently wait ed for them to oomo out, as the water was too shallow for him to attack them. As the enemy did not come out, he sent in to investigate, and found, tc his astonishment, that Russians and ships had vanished. While he had been wuiting for them in the south they had quietly slipped out by the north, teaching both him and the British Government a rather severe lesson in geography, as it had beer thought that Saghalin wasan isthmus: and they were totally uu aware of e narrow channel leading from tho Gulf to the Sea of Okhotsk. —New York Ad | vertiser. Pneumatic Postal Tubes. The pneumatic tubes laid dowr some years ago between the mair office in London and the railway stations have been abandoned because they were not always reliablo. It sc happened that when they were most needed they failed to work and some foreign mails of tho greatest import- I ance to the British Government got I stuck in one of them one day and missed a steamer. Tho tubes would be a great convenience if they could be relied upon, for they carry in twe minutes the same amount of mail that it would require a wagon twenty minutes to carry. The tubes are still in the earth and will probably be im proved some time so as to make them successful.—Chicago Record. LULLABY. Dear little girl, good-night, good-night! The pretty birds in their nests are still; We watched the sun as he sank from sight, Over the tree tops on yonder hill. Two stars have come since the daylight went, Away over there in the sky's dark blue, They must be angels that God has sent To watch my baby the whole night through* Dear little gtrl, good-night, good-night 1 I hear the frogs in the meadow call; They croak and croak in tho evening light, Down in the pond by tho old stone wall. L think, perhaps, that they tell the flowers Never to fear, though the world is dark They know tho firefly lights the hours All night long with his cheerful spark. Dear little girl, good-night, good-night I Dear little lioad, with your silky hair, Dear little form that 1 hold so tight, Cozy and warm in the nursery chair! White lids are veiling the eyes so clear. Over their blueness tho fringes creep, Slower and slower I roc c you dear, My little girl is asleep, asleep. —Good Housekeeping* HUMOR OF TIIE DAY. Only the untried man wholly trusts himself.—Dallas News. What nine meu out of ten want is a home with hotel comforts.—Puck. A preferred creditor is usually ono that doesn't fight for prompt pay ment. —Puck. These balloon sleeves evidently come of a desire to widen woman's sphere.—Boston Transcript. A man who is a complete failure ia nearly always particularly fond of giv ing advice.—Atchison Globe. It was a junior in the Abilene High School who wrote "Evening Dawned at Last."—Leavenworth Times. An egotist reminds one of a lizard; lop off a bit of him, he squirms a littio and straightway grows on again. Some future generation. If we mnke no mistake. Will kick about tho biscuits That papa used to bake. —Detroit Tribune. If you can't remember what tho string tied on your finger was to re mind you of, you are getting old.— Atchison Globe. "That must bo a very good book Jumper is reading." "Impossible. He seems to be profoundly interested. * —Chicago Inter-Ocean. A housekeeper up town says her grocer is so slow with his delivery that when she orders eggs the boy brings her chickens. Philadelphia Record. Morton —"Are you sure that Peuam is really reconciled with his wife?" Crandall—"Yes, lam sure of it, for she reads what ho writes and ho eats what she cooks."—Truth. "They say it is electricity," said Pat, as he stopped before the incandescent street-light, "but I'll be hanged if I see how it is they make the hairpin burn in the botthle."—Yule Record. Sympathy—"My lord," said an overworked parson to his bishop, "I have not had a holiday for five years." "I am very sorry for your congrega tion," replied his lordshij), with a smile."—Tid-Bits. Hostess—"l am going to ask you to take a charming widow down to din ner. Will you?" Burrows—"Cer tainly. I'll take her anywhero that there is a crowd to protect me."— Boston Transcript. Loud sobbed tho trump : tun groat wet tears Left largo and briny tracks. •Tray what," quoth I. "If not too bold, Your heart so sorely racks?" ''Alas !' sobbed he. "I've just been told About this income tax." —Boston Budget. Wo often sneer at the Egyptians for being a slow people, but on the con trary they must have been a very busy race. Even tho mummies appear to have been pressed for tiuie.—Rock land (Me.) Tribune. "But, Emma, how can you prefer the plain and shabbily-dressed Julius to my elegant and handsome broth er?" "That is quite simple; your brother is in love with himself, and Julius with me."—Life. "I think Miss Smith and Mr. Jones must be engaged; they have had their portraits taken together." "Indeed? lam glad to hear it. I knew when I introduced them that she would bo taken with him."—Now York FxJ33 t A Huge Moorsp-Hcad. What is probably one of the finest moose-heads in the world was taken to Bangor, Me., this week by G. H. Crocker, of Fitzburg, Mass. The ani mal was shot up in Aroostook County at tho Ox Bow, and the moose weighed 1400 pounds. It is about absolutely perfect in size, shape and spread of the antlers. The antlers spread sixty inches, and when it is considered that fifty-one inches is a large spread, some idea of the iminen3o antlers of this moose is obtained. The largest set of antlers of which there is any record is sixty-one inches, and this moose sur passed that animal in the shape and formation.—Boston Herald. Loaf Sugar in Morocco. An important aiticjo of trade in Morocco is loaf sugar, which is in general demand for presents. Every person approaching a superior, whoso favor or good will it is desired to pro pitiate, is bound to bring a gift. Ho cannot appear empty-handed, and tho form that is most commonly taken by the gift is loaf sugar.—New York Dis patch. A Storn Disciplinarian. General Count von Heseler, of the German Army, is a stern old soldier and a strict disciplinarian. He has been known to stop a subordinate in the street and make him remove his boots and stockings to see if his feet were clean. —Chicago Herald.