FitEELAim Tribune; PUBLIfiHKO ITlltT MONDAT AND THUBSDAY. rnos. A. BTTOKUEJY, EDITOR AND I^OPBIETOR. OFFICE: MAIN STREET A BOYS CENTRA. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Year 1] pq 61X Mentha j IS Four Months ~ 50 Two Months - - a Subscribers are requested to observe the data following tho name on the labels of their papers. By referring to thin they can tell at a glance how they stand on tho books In this office. For Instance: Grover Cleveland 28June96 moans that Grover Is paid up to Juno 28,1896. Koep the figures In advance of tho present date. Report promptly to this office when your paper w not received. All arrearages must bo paid when paper is discontinued, or collection wIH he made in the manner provided by law. Ocr Animal Friends has collected statistics wliich show that 102 cases of lockjaw resulted in tho year 1891 from docking horses* tails. Among tho new postoffices estab lished in Washington State, noted by tho Chicago Record, aro Pysht, Quit lagnettc, Utsaladdy and Kliskitat. It is said in tho New York Recorder that until the year 189 d, no colored man over served on a jury in Maine. W. A. Johnson, of Rangor, is the pio neer. The Sioux Indians proposo to raise by popular subscription a fund for tho erection of a monument to their Chief, Tron Nation, who died recently on tho reservation near Chamberlain, South Dakota. Iron Nation had been a prominent figure in Sioux affairs for sixty years. Queerer suit at law was never brought than that of H. Magill against the OBage Council. Magill was going through tho reservation when tho In dians caught and tied him, out his hair and hold a war danco round him. Ho sues for SI 0,000, aud tho Council offers §SOO to settle. Scotch banks will nt nn early\uto rciluco the interest on deposits to one [JOT cent., tho lowest over pakl. The managers state that they are com pelled to tnko this course because tho English banks are only paying one half per cent. They also say that they ncvor experienced such difficulty in reinvesting money. A new languago lias just been added to tho Biblo Society's list, bringing up tho total number to over 320. This time, as in somo other recent in stances, tho new version is for Africa. It is n translation of tho gospel of S:. Matthew into Ivisukuma, the languago of tho Basukuma people, whose coun try lies immediately south cf Lake Victoria Nyanza. Tho vaunted protection of the seals in Alaskan water is a myth, in tho opinion of tho New York Mail and Ex press. Secretary Carlisle reports that 121,143 wero killed by pelagic soiiers last year. This statement lias caused u suggestion to bo made in Congress that tho Government undertake (ha slaughter of the remaining seals, esti mated to number 450,030, aud sell tho tkins, which avouhl bo valued at $lO,- 000,000 if properly cured. It is strange that the two greatest Govern ments in tho world cannot protect tha seals. Possibly there is somo reason not apparent on the surface why this is so. Dr. Cliauncey M. Dopew in a rccont interview in predicting 18')5's pro gress in railroading, very pertinently stated : "Take, for instance, tho New York Central ltuilroad. Our trains might almost bo termed flashes of lightning, but thoir rate is not a eir cumstanco to tho speed wo arc now aiming at. 'Then there is tho matter of safety. I ueed not assure you that tho safety of passengers is the most important thing a railroad man has to with. This coming year we expect to attain w hat some peoplo may consider a chimera—nnmcly, pcrfoot freedom from risk in tho transportation of hu man beings by rail. We have, we be lieve, solved the problem, and that, I should say, will make 1895 an un equaled year in railroading. In tha fur as in tho near future, romantio things aro done, or nro being pro jeotod. A tunnel to tho summit of tho Jungfrau is one of tho things pos sible. Tho Trans-Siberian Railway and tho South African line to lilashon aland are two projects on tho edgo of tho futuro—tho former nlready under way—und tho poetry of railroading will be experienced in tho new rush of railroad building certain to ensue in Japan when tho Chinesownr indemnity is paid—which will certainly happen in 1895." uo not wnsto nil your wind calling for help.--Galveston News. THE ROUNDELAY OF THE YEAR. Dying winter cowers By the smouldering flro. What cares he for flowers That bud for tho spring's desire, While over his end draws nigher? Welladay For Y*sterday Is the season's roundelay! In her nest of leaves- Over thick for breath— The spent springtide grieves At the doom tho south wind saith, The summer wind of her death. Welladay For Yesterday Is the season's roundelay! For her lost delight Summer makoth moan. Autumn scales tho hoight With her scarlet flag outblown— Farewell to the swallow flown! Welladay For Yesterday 13 the season's rouudelayl Autumn's trembling hold Lets his gray cloak fall, over him weak and old Drops tho wintor's icy pall! And this is the end of all. Welladay ForYestorday Is the seas en's roundelay! Nay, tho season dies But to live anew! Next year's swallow flies Where the last year's swallow flow, Far up in tho sunuy blue! Soize To-day That fleets away Is tho season's roundelay! —Mrs. Osgood, in Youth's Companion. A WOMAN'S KISS. r>,, /T7 BS. MAINE was | j j I thinking, as seri -11 ously as sho could ( ever think at all, of marrying again. /Spu-% was a young ] and pretty widow, ,il/ and when she first appeared in the w conventional f-'y weeds that so 1 poiutodly indieato die presonce of grief for a departed husband, London went quite mad ibout her. Pair women whoso sponses were still hale und hearty took to go ing out in lilaek crape ball dresses, ilul for a timo colors becamo almost aufashiouablo. lint when tho ap pointed year of mourning had run its jourse, Mrs. Maine lot oIF wearing olaelt with ft light heart. Sho was passionately found of bright things, af gay music, ol' the frivolities that are lupposed to make life endurable. She put away her sombre gowns, and in a ihort tnno had almost forgotten that !ho bad ever been married. Her bus land had possessed a fortune and au inherited weakness of tho lungs. Ho lied of the latter, and bequeathed to aer the former. Now, when sho ehanced to think of him, she not un naturally blessed his memory. Her freedom was absolutely com plete. Sho could go into a nunnery Dr dunce tho can-can, whichover sho chose. She did neither, precisely, but visited tho playhouses; was often to Vie seen with lively little parties sipping at the Savoy, drove down very frequently to Hurlingham or Rane lagb, and spent her days and nightß In society, desiring nothing better, perfectly satisfied and perfectly suc cessful. .Everybody called her a dear little womau, und the only luxury that she could not command was an enemy. This sort of thing went on until she wus twenty-eight. Life was certainly real to her, but it was never earnest. It was a jingle of music, a ring-o'-bells, a masked ball without a midnight of unmasking, a battle in which tho only weapons were flowers. She enjoyoll it all immensely until she was twenty eight, and then acertuiu wcariuoss be gan to creep over her and to frighten lier. Sho was forced to realize, with a strong reluctance, that among her many possessions she numberod the bizarre capacity for tiring of accus tomed things, which has wreokod so many lives and wrinkled so many faces. Her frivolous friends bored her. She vas passing into another period—was bending to listen to fresh voicos. A lovo of fame, and of those who possessed it, woke slowly in her heart. She had never been a social Diana, never a huntress tracking down lions. When she had met great mon, or men reputod great, she had likeil thorn to worship hor ; sho had never dreamed of worshiping them, llut one season in hor set it became the fashion to ad mire effort and sit at tho feet of ac complishment rather than of boiuty or of money; and when her set got up Mrs. Maine remained in the posturo of worship. Henceforth ska loved only to bo with thoso who had done something, or wero in course of doing something. Sho gave up going to balls and began to search about in her mind for talents. Could not she do something too— write a story, paint a picture, cause a world to weep or lnugh or gape at some dood of hers? She was tired of being known as a beanty. Compli ments paid to lier features fatigued her. She wanted peoplo to adore her mind ; that they found it difficult to do so was a source of annoyatico to her. Only when she had made an ef fort in literature aud failed did she become less egotistical. Her vauity evaporated like a little gray mist, aud, unable to he a successful writer hor self, sho was at last content to livo iu tho work of others. Sho was resolved to havo a salon and to inspire talent to iqighty deeds. Rising mon at tracted lier groatly, and she surround ed herself with them, impregnating their atmosphere of expectation with the less exciting and calmer atmos phere of power and dignity that ema nates from the fully risen. Men, both rising and risen, admired and appreciated her for her beanty and her sympathy, but there was one who loaruod to feel far more than ad miration, and he was the immediate cause of Mrs. Maine's serious mood to-day. Hiß name was Roger Slade, and ho was an artist, very celebrated and very picturesque. Ho was also intensely ambitious, and not disin clined to add a successful mnrriage to tho weapons with which ho intended to fight, and completely conquor, the world. Mrs. Maine sat alone now in her delicate drawing room—a whito draw ing room, with au ivory carpet, snowy rugs and quantities of white Dresden—thinking how very cele brated and how very picturesque he was. Tho day was foggy and cold. Pedestrians slipped on the pavements, lost their tempers and their way. Battalions of filthy torchbearers screamed husky offors of assistance. Omuibuß horses tumbled down and re fused tumultuously to get up. The cries of skaters came faintly from the ornamental water in St. James's Park. And Mrs. Maine sat by her fire, very warm and snug, but very grave. She WHS considering U weighty matter. "I wonder what I had better do?" she thought, glancing down at a note that she held in her hand. "I wonder what I really want to do?" And she read the noto again for quito the sixth time. It was very short and very plain spoken : "Savilio Club, Piccadilly, Jan. 11, 189—. "My Dear Mrs. Maine: Will you bo sur prised at this lottery I hardily think so. Yon must havo divined iolig ago tho state of my feelings towards you, and, indeed, you have encouraged mo to believe that I could make your life happier and more complete than it lias hoeii since you wore left comparatively alone among your troops of friends. I ask you to marry me, since I love you dourly. Can you givo yourself to me? To-morrow, at 5 o'clock, I will call to reeeivo your an swer. If you instruct your servaui to say,. "Not at home," I shall understand that I am refused, but see mo, dear friend, uinLioll mo that yoa wili ho to mo in tho future some thing dearer still—my inspiror, my wife. Yours always, liuoEii SIADE." Tho noto was liko tho man, Mrs. Maine thought—grave, restrained, but very siucore, very straightforward. As sho read it she recalled tho liour past iu which tho artist had loomed so large a iigure. Yes, it was true, she had given him every reasou to hope. Sho had ' singled him out from the crowd who surroundod her and led him on to love her. Did she love him? She thought so. "What shall I do? ' Sho murmured. "Ho is coming for his answer at 5" sho looked ut the clook—"in a quarter of au hour. If I say 'Not at homo' he will tuke it as a refusal. Shall I be iu?" She smiled softly at tho fire. "1 think I will." Just at that moment there came a ring at tho bell, and Mrs. Maine started up. "He is more than punc tual," sho thought as sho cast a hasty glance into tho mirror in order to have tho customary satisfaction of knowing that she was looking her best. There wero steps outside, and the butler opened the door; but it was not the artist who followed him. A thin woman, with a light fringe worn very low on her forehead, gray eyes, and an unsmiling expression, outered slowly. Mrs. Maino tried to hide tho disap pointment that she felt. "How good of yon to come through the fog to see me, Belle!" she said. "Sit here by tho flro and I will give you some tea." Her friend Bit down dreamily, and remarked: " Whom wero you expect ing, dear?" "How could I expect anybody upon such a day?" "And it was a man: I know that by your look into the glass. ' "Really, Belle, you are too obser vant. And suppose it was? What then ?" Belle de Rinskilooked nt Mrs. Maine critically, and continuod : "Why, you aro actually blushing! Surely you aro not expeoting a lover to como to you through the fog?" The young widow laughed a little unensily. What if I said a future hus band?" "Aud he is coming?" "At 5 o'clock." "Iu ten minutes. So you aro posi tively thinking of marrying again! How extraordinary!" "I scarcely see why. Do you in tend always to remain a widow— the richest, tho most independent widow iu London, as I heard you called only yesterday?" Tho other waived tho question with a quiet deliberation that was charac teristic of her, aud put another : "May I not hear his name?" Mrs. Maine hesitated for a moment. Thou sho answered : "Well, you are groat friend, aud you probably have guessed it already. Why should I not tell you? It is your old friend, Roger Slade." The Comtesse de Rinski put her tea cup down with a sudden movement that caused a clatter of china. "Yos, a little more tea, plcaso," sho said. "And I liko it strong. Roger Slxde—that is u curious choice. So he hao proposed to yon?" "Only by letter. Ho is coming to day for his answer, at 5 o'clock. If I say 'Not at home,' he will take it for a, refusal." "Really. And you will say"— " 'At home,' I think." The Couutesse looked at tho clock thoughtfully and sippod her strong tea. "And so iu five minutes you mean to make up your mind fo relinquish your liberty," sho said in oven tones. "Well, why not? Wo women are the' strangest creatures, certainly. Tbero will be an eruption of piotures pres ently upou tho walls of the exhibi tions; Mrs. Slado as Venus, as Ariaduo, as I'sychu; portrait of the artist's wife, by R. Slade, A. R. A. You will lie a pretty model. Yes. It is much ' the same thiug. I suppose his carn | estuess will never bore you. Ho is a good fellow, but ho is terribly in earnest." "I liko that. There is a depth in his gravities, not dullness. Yes, I know I like that." * "But severe earnestness at break fast, at afternoon tea, in ono's opera box—might not that prove trying?" Mrs. Maine considered. "I don't know. I havo hardly thought about it. He only wroto to mo this morn ing." "And you will say 'yes' without a moment's consideration? After all, if you love him you are are quite right." " I think I do," Mrs. Maino said, a little doubtfully. "1 think I shall." Tho Comtesso do Rinski took a tiny roll of bread and butter and re marked: "Thoy say his prices are going down." Mrs. Maino frowned slightly. "Im possible," she said. "Why, ho is at the very height of fame." "Yes, he is very celebrated. In the old days it used to bo ouco a colebrity always a celebrity; but now people can riso and fall while you cau say one. At Lambe's gallery in Old Bond street they declare that his popularity is 011 tho wane. If that bo truo, no wonder ho stretches out his hands for consolation. Lovo is often an ex cellent crutch for hobbling ambi tion—" "But—but—" "You would rather sharo his glory than sooth his dark hour. Ah, Kitty, that is so liko you." "No, Belle, you are wrong. But a waning celebrity is uut to bo irrita able." 4 'One can always calm irritation with affection. And ho is quite good looking. Kitty, dear, I congratu late you." Mrs. Maine got up from her sofa restlessly and walked about the room, puttiug one or two of the white oruua ments that rosted on the whito velvet over-mantel straight, fidgeting with the silk cushion, stirriug the iiro that already blazed brightly enough. "Perhaps your congratulations aro premature," sho said. "Why? I thought from your man ner that you had quite decided." "I mean to decide by to-night." "But that is rather hard upon him, isn't it? If you let him in this after noon of courso ho will believe that you intend to accept him." "And if I don't?" "He will think ho is refused." "I can wiito and explain to-night ono way or tko other." "But meanwhile ho will bo in mis ery." Mrs. Maine did not look ill-pleased at the idea. "Yes, poor fellow," she said. "But if I accept him after all, his eventual joy will bo the greater. Besides, Belle, you aro right. I must have a little time for consideration. Men always are in such n hurry." 4 That is true," said the eomtesso, puftmg her whito teacup down care fully. Just then the clock chimed five, and almost simultaneously there a ring at the hall door bell. "There ho is," said tho eomtesso. "Will you 800 him? Bocauso if sol will go at once." She stood up, with her gray eyes fixed upon her friend. But tho latter opened tho drawing room door, and called softly to the footman: "Somers, say, INot ut home.' " 44 Yes, ma'am." "And let mo know at once who called." "Yes. ma'am." Tho hill door opened and shut, and a moment later tho man entered with a card. It bore the iiamo of Roger Blade, and in tho corner was scribbled in pencil, "P. P. C." - Mrs. Maine took the card thought fully. "Poor fellow !" sho said. "But perhaps I may make him happy to night. Ob, you are not going, Belle?" 44 Yes, dour, I must run away, after all. I have just remembered another call I meant to pay close by." "You will puss him in your car riage, perhaps. Do peep aud tell mo if ho is looking sad. Writo this even ing and toll mo." "I will. Good-by, darling." And sho kissed Mrs. Maine and went out across the hall to her carriage. As soon as Belle had gone, Mrs. Maine went upstairs, ordered hor car riage, to tho dismay of her coachman, and wrapped herself in furs. "Drive to Laiubo's Gallery, iußoud stroet," sho said, as sho got into tho brougham. With some difficulty tho coachman found his way there, and Mrs. Maine entored tho gallery, and, under the pretoxt of choosing some etchings, enterod into conversation with one of tho attendants, a polite young man, whoso ono desire in life seemed to bo to ailord his employer's customers ex clusive iuformation ou all matters con nected with art. 4 4 You haven't any pictures by Roger Slado for sale at presont, I suppose?" sho askod eventually, with an affecta tion of careloss indifferenco that she was far from fooling. No, they had none just then, she was told. 4, 1 hear his prices aro goiug up,' Mrs. Maiuo continuod warm Iv. To her surprise aud delight the young man acquiesced. Mr. Slade's fame was increasing rather thuu dimin ishing in tho art world, ho declared. Thero was a tremendous run on all his work, and dealers were quite prepared to pay very largo sums for tho small est outcome of hi 3 talent. This was all that Mrs. Maine desired to know, and slio drove homo well pleased, but a triilo puzzled. "I wonder how Belle came to make such a mistake!" she thought. 'There is evidently nothing of the waning celebrity about my lover." She picked up his card again in the drawing room, and smiled ai she looked at the "P. P. C." in the cor ner. I "I wonder what he felt like when he stood on my doorstep and wrote those three letters?" she said to hor self. "Well, after dinner I will sit down and write him a note that will put him out of his misery. I wonder if Belle saw him as sho was going away, and whether sho will sendicund to tell mo how he looked. But no communication arrived from the Comtesso de Rinski, and Mrs. Maine could only go on wondering. It was just after 9 o'clock when sho sat down to write to the artist. She had thought things thoroughly over and had made up her mind that she was tired of being a widow, and that Roger Slado would bo tho ideal hus band ; handsome, affectionate, and, best of all, completely succesful. Yet, she was assured of that last and most important fact now, and tho assur anco mado her eyes glitter with eager ness and her cheeks flush, as sho picked up a pen and drew a sheet of paper towards hor. "My dear Mr. Slade," sho wrote, and then sho was interrupted by tho entrance of tho footinau with a salver. "A note for you, ma'am, "ho said. "There is no answer." Mrs. Maine took it up and saw that the addross was in Roger Slade's hand writing. Sho smiled. "He has reconsidered his 4 P. P. C.,' " she thought, "and written again to beg mo to marry him. How he loves mo !" And she tore the note open and road it swiftly: Dear Mrs. Maine: As I was leaving youi door this afternoon, after receiving your re ply to my letter. I encountered your friend, the Comtosse do Bin.sk •, who told ino she had just been with you. She drove me home, and somehow I was inovod to toll her of my trouble—a trouble that I have put awuy from mo now, I hope, forever. Although she stood up for you In your strange and—forgive m*j for saying it—cruelly heartless conduct to wards me as a friend should, I could—well, to make a long story short, I asked her t<; give it to me for all time. At first she re fused absolutely; sho said that it was impos sible, after what I had just told her. But at last sho consontod to bo my wife—out of pity, perhaps. Yet pity often grows into love. She is a true Woman. Give mo your congratula tions. That is all I ask of you. Yours sincerely, UOOEK BLADE. Mrs. Mai no stood still by tho table with the letter in her baud ; hor face was very whito. Then sho let it slip to tho iloor as sho murmured with trembling lips: "A tru3 womaul Yos, and tho richest widow in Lon don !" A new thought seemed to strike her, and she shuddered as if with cold, as she added in a whisper: "And she kissed mo as she wont!"—Loudon World. "Dingbats." Tho Boston Journal gives various theories as to the meaning of the word "dingbats." Ono writer, who spent his boyhood in Maiue, thinks it means to spunk, bocauso his mother when gotting ready to use the slipper threatened to put the "dingbats" on him. From Wilbraham Acadomy comes tho explanation that it menus the breakfast biscuit, which the students disposo of by sticking it to tho under side of the table, throwing it at tho heads of other students or eating it. A Connecticut pupil states that to recoive punishment at tho hands of the teacher is known as 4 'getting the dingbats." Two Phila dolphiaus agree that it moans money, as in the sentence "I've got the ding bats for it." But New Hampshire agrees with Maine that it means spanking, and so tho majority appears to side with tho maternal slipper. It is from such * 'little acorns" that tho tall tree of our almost cosmopolitan language has grown. Wo got "blizzard" from the West, "ku-klux" from tho South, "boom" from tho ambitious cities, "crank" from the eccentric minds in every part of tho country, "pantata" from Italy, and "chalitza" from Russia. "Dingbats" is going to be a great convenience. Resistance of the Body to Cold. At the meeting of the French Academy of Sciences M. Piotet de scribed his experiments on tho radia tion of heat from the human body at low tern pel aturc, Hays La Nature. After covering himself with furs ho placed himself in a huge tube whose temperature could bo reduced as low as 130 degrees C. His head alouc re mained outside, as tho respiration of air as cold as this would be seriously injurious. As low as fifty degrees the furs arrostod radiation, which fact ex plains tho resistance to cold exhibited by polar animals. Beyond seventy degrees tho heat traversed tho furs, but tho skin felt no sensation of cold, jAs a moans of defense nature excites internal phenomena of combustion | and digestion. In fact, in four minutes tho sensation of hunger be gan to bo felt. Mr. Pictet asserts that by this means ho was cured of dyspepsia, from which ho had suffered for several years, eight sittings in a tubo cooled down to 110 degrees sufficing for tho purpose. Chinese Generals Criticised. Of tho Chiueso Generals, some have been decapitated in person, some by proxy, others both ways, the Com mander-in-Chief is in bod, and Hwang Cbao, Weiju, aud Okaug, together with other officers of high rank, liavo hiddon thomsolves. The gallant Snug remains, likewise General Nioh, !o plus brave dos braves, and they are utoudily engaged in devastating Manchuria uuder tho impression that it is tho enemy's country. General Tsao has also been seen about, with 4000 men ; thero is real heroism in a Chinoso general who lots anybody know whore •ho is just now. A battle ia considered im minent, but it will hardly be a very big affair. Tho Chinese commaiider.? take good care not to concentrate, which is probably a wise policy, as their troops are better fitted for ir regular operations. So aro they.— Pall Mall Gazotte. SHARP GIRL DETECTIVES.' ! THEY CAN SPOT A SHOPLIPTE3 AT A GLANCE. People Who Pilfer by Wholesale— Tricks of the Professionals—Len ient to First Offenders. V \ ( T E have to resort to all \/\/ sorts of disguises to V w Kct even with the shop lifters," n girl detec tive said to a New York Sun reporter. "They get so that they know us, and are careful to be on their good be havior when we're around, so we change our dresses, hats and coats, and tho way wo fix our hair, in order to fool them. Often wo stand right close to thein in the crowd and they don't recognize us." "Wo arc always dressod as if we had just come in from tho street," said hor companion, "and no one ever takes us to be connected with tho storo at all. I fixed myself up as an old wo man once, with speotacles, grizzly hair, a scoop bonnet, anil an old shawl, and hobbled along for several squaros behind two women whom wo suspected of taking things, but whom we had no real evidence against. Sure enough they took the things to a cer tain fence in Ludlow street, which eomo time after the polico raided. Beveral articles belonging to tho stock hero were found among tho stolen goods that thoy hadn't boon able to sell. "We'ro instructed to be very par ticular about making arrests," she went on. "Tho Superintendent says says he would rather have a hundred guilty pooplo go unpunished than huvo one innocent person accused ; besides, if falsely accused, the parties oould sue the house for heavy dumuges. Wo never acouso any one, no mutter how much we mny suspect, until wo actual ly see something stolou. I'voTbeen de tective in this store nearly ten years, and l'vo got so that I can tell a shop lifter almost at first glance. I judge from tho uneasy way they roll their eyes around, from the motion of their fingers, and the way they move their hands. They assume various disguises. Nearly all the professionals that wo arrest have pawn tickets somewhere about them, and thoy try to get rid of these in all sorts of ways so that we don't got hold of them. One girl chewed up a pawn ticket nud swallowed it, and was chewing up fmother when wo found out what she was up to. An other girl had two rings in her mouth which she had taken from tho jewelry counter." "There aro lots of people who take things without so good un excuse— women and men who want to dress up to tho mark and haven't got tho money to reach it. Two girls wero caught here not long ago just loaded up with ribbons and lace, fancy pins, buckles, gloves, and such things. Tho way in which they had stowed away stuff in their stockings and various othor hid ing places was a caption. Among tho odd articles found in tho stocking of one girl was a bottle of whisky. It was crammed in and then tiod tight to keep it from slipping. A bottle of cologno was fixod in the samo way. Those girls said they had stolen ribbon beforo, and promised that if wo would let them off they would tell us of com panions of theirs who they knew did the same thing. They said that they belonged to respectable people. I went to tho address thoy gnvo, a fow days later, and found that the family was respeotable, and, after keeping them in suspense awhile, wo agreed uot to make a case against them." JJJ"Did you over see a shoplifter's skirt?" asked the male detective, and then he showed tho reporter a singu lar-looking garment which had been taken off a shoplifter, and which was kopt by tho firm to be produced in court. "Tho woman who hn.l this skirt—this kick, as thoy call it—on had forty-eight different articles in her possession, stolen from this store. She was walkiug in tho Btreet about two blocks away when we overtook hor. Hero is a list of tho things she had managed to secrete: Nino pairs of kid gloves, six pocketbooks, live pairs of mitts, six pairs of stookings, pins, one pulley for a wash lino, u lock, three knife rosts, two plates, four bells, two pairs of scissors, ouo can opener, ono glass pitcher, ear rings, one Bmall basket, one small clock, ono nlouso trap, and two oil burners; sl6 worth in all." The skirt was simply a black calico walking skirt, with a donblo lining fastened firmly to tho outsido nt tho bottom and secured at tho waist with twostroug belts. There were capacious opeuings at convenient poiuts, and the skirt was worn beneath an outside skirt, which had a long slit in tho full pleats to correspond with tho opening in the garment beneath. "What do men select to steal?" asked tho reporter. "Usually gloves, perfumery, nock- rings, silk handkerchiefs, hosiery. Wo round a fine-looking man ono day getting away with §ls worth of poekotbooks, gloves, and bottles of cologne. Men have so many inside and outside i>ockets that they can tuck away a great deal. A singular case is that of an old man who proved to bo in tho employ of u railroad com pany in Now Jersey. Ho frequently buys goods here, and yet ho seems un able to resist cabbaging things occa sionally. He takes such articles as pills, corn cures, potash troches, bot tles of phosphate and tonics. A fa vorite trick of tho woman professional is to bring a baby with her. Under tho baby's skirts no end of things can bo concealed. "A baby's clothes can hido more than a shawl," Baid ono of tho girl de tectives. "A woman got away with a good-sized looking glass, a basket, three blocks of ribbon, and over so muny pairs of glovos—slo.so worth of things tucked awav between, her and the baby and under the baby's cloak." "Wo have to watch the poople in tho fitting rooms who have garments sent in to bo tried on," her companion said. "Sometimes the men put on two pairs of trousers, one over another, and a woman will stuff an extra jacket under tho suit sho has bought for her small boy. Somo time ago a woman was found with four jerseys in her muff. Muifs nro made hollow for shop lifters." "Tho Italian screamers, thoso who screech outrageously when detected, in tho hopo of frightening us, and tho pickpockets keep us lively, too," suid tho man. "Thero nro plenty of them around, men, women and chil dren. I could easily decide as to a suspicious character by patting a pockotbook in tho outsido pookot of my coat and standing about for a mo ment, but it wouldn't do to have it said that tho detective put temptation in a thief's way, so I wait patiently and watch, soraetimos for days, uutil . I catch the tuspoct in the very act. Thero is a certain young fellow, übout nineteen yeurs old, who regularly trains boys in this old-time profession, so tho detectives in tho down-town stores have to be on their-aldrt." WISE WORDS. A mnn's heart has many entrances. Generosity thrives best in poor soil. A rolling snowball gathers as it goes. Suspicion is usually a good invest ment. Money is a slim diot for a hungry heart. Creilit is a nice thing until tho bills aro due*. The silent man is ofton worth list ening to. It is a long-suffering worm that ha 3 no turning. Somo men ure always haviug a "ter rible time." Molasses may catoh flio3, but it won't catch spiders. Everybody's turn to bo neglected comes somo day. Every inun pays too much attention to his stubbornness. No night was over so dark that morning did not come. Mothers can do more to help savo tho world than preacher;-, A lazy man is always talking übout how hard ho has to work. When beauty looks out of tho win dow, love comes in at tho door. It isn't taking modicino that hurts ; it is making up your mind to it. You can tell by tho flavor of tho honey where tho boos have been. Fully ninety per cent, of the pooplo will iinposo upon you if thoy can. Don't buy eggs for hatching until you have counted your setting hens. Peoplo take medioino for languor when the real modicinojiooded is work. Nino troubles out of ton will ran when you look them squarely in tho face. Tho best thing that can happen to a man is to have a wife who is also his chum. Somo peoplo act ridiculously and then become indignant because peo ple tell it. Tho man who permits himself to bo blackmailed is worse than the black mailer.—The South-West. Japan's I,earned Soldiers. It appears that notebooks nro quite common in the Japanese Army among both soldiers nau coolies; they keep regular diuries, and tako copious notes of everythiug they sec. "It is sur prising," writes a war corraspoudent to tho China Mai), "what a lot tlifty know about tho Great West. Several ' ' of thorn talk intelligently of Spartans and Persians, Napoleon and his march to Moscow, and oven comparo tho abolition of feudalism in England nud Japan. Thoy fully understand all that is implied in tho contrast between old fashionc.l hand-to-hand warfare and modern long-range manoeuvres; and they speak soornfully of tho Chincso tactics at Ping-Yang, in trying cavalry charges against massed bodies of rifle men without first using thoir machina guns, us the French nt Waterloo did their ltcld pieoes, to throw tho ranks iu disorder. AUjthis from the Japan ese must be surprising to Europeans, ' becauso wo do not know them. Their r progress is greater and more real than foreigners imagine."—London News. S !• The Hop Drummer's Reception. A story couios from Germany to tho effect that a traveler iu hops when paying his first visit to afamotis brew ery iu Houth Germnny, was about to enter tho office, when he liotiend a plate with the inscription: "Hop Sravelors up stairs." Concluding therefrom that a special room was set apart for iuterviewiug travelers ho took tho hint, an I ou reaching the top of the stairs he found himself in a long passage, the walls of whioh were adorned at intervals with the imago of a hand pointing iu ouo direction. At tho end of tho corridor uuothur hand pointed to a second flight of steps leading downwards. At tho bottom of tho steps a hand poiutud to a door, which he opened and found himself— iu the street. —New Orleans Piouyune. Hot Stuff. The latest fad in the North is oups mode with small thermometers to tell tho temperature of tho beverage, HO that tho man iu a hurry need not scald his "innards." This is probably the invention of Bomo victim of hot coffee at a railway station with "ton min utes" for lunch; or, may be, it is to satisfy tho imbiber who shouts for red hot stuff, and is liable to Bhoot the mixer if ho does not get it.—Now • Orleans Picayune.