Japan is about to send a lot of ex perts to this country to teach the peo ple how to make tea. English officials estimate that it will cost the Government $15,000,000 to suppress the uprising in India. Horses may be cheap enough else where, but on the Klondike trail even the poorest cuts are worth fifty cents a pound. In the period 1882 to 1894 the crim inal record in the German empire in creased twenty-two per cent., or twelve per cent, more than the popu lation. If there were more big estates to settle, observes the Detroit Free Press, there would probably be more lawyers. The attorneys in the Davis case in Minnesota got about $5,000,- 000 before the heirs got anything. The Germans seem to be losing their respect for the Emperor. Last year there was eighty-three per cent, more imprisonments for lese majeste, which is the term for the treason of speaking disrespectfully about roy alty, than eleven years ago. Deputy Attorney-General Elkin, of Pennsylvania, decides that mutual life insurance companies may issue poli cies requiring the payment of period ical premiums of a fixed and definite sum in lieu of the assessments made upon the death of members. The Times of India directs attention to the influence which the prevalence of distress has had upon the statistics of crime in that country. As the scarcity of food pressed more heavily during the last two years upon the agricultural population the number of offences gradually rose. But it is noted that the excess of crime was almost entirely confined to petty offen ces against property. This indicates that it was hunger which drove many Df the offenders to do what, under nor mal conditions, they would perhaps have never dreamed of doing. Indeed, the emaciated condition of the great number of prisoners was further proof of this. A noticeable feature of the returns has been the increase in the convictions of old offenders, which leads one jail superintendent to sug gest that "old offenders appreciate the advantage of jail life in a year of scarcity." John Brisben Walker announces that E. Benjamin Andrews, who has re signed as President of Brown Uni versity, will take charge of the Cosmo politan University. The method of the new school so far as worked out is as follows: A studeut will forward to the university his name and address aud the purpose for which education is sought, and the studies which the applicant desires to pursue. Each such statement will goto Dr. Andrews who will map out the course of study which ho deems the best possible for the applicant in the light df the infor mation conveyed. He will then dis patch his own diagnosis of the appli cant's case and prescription therefor to the most eminent expert on the par ticular study with whom he is ac quainted. This expert will revise the course and the accompanying instruc lions and return the document to President Andrews. Czar Nicholas has been entertain, ing President Faure of France. Prob ably never before has the President of a Republic been received with such royal pomp. This time, asserts the Washington Pathfinder, it is the Russians that ajjpear to have gone mad with enthusiasm at the idea of a French alliance. The Russian ladies have loaded the French officers with flowers; the French sailors have been carried on the shoulders of the frenz ied populace of St. Petersburg, and fete upon fete lias been given in honor of the visitors. Coming OD the heels of the great demonstration to Emperor William, of Germany, this ovation to President Faure and his party is extremely significant. Politics is at the bottom [of every iruch function, and the politics of the present summer's hospitalities at the court of Russia is that Russia, in the nnpreme conflict that she must sooner or later wage with England, wants to know whom she can depend upon. Germany and Russia are now sworn allies; France, though at sword's points with Germany, is so jealous of England that she, too, finds it good politics to follow Russia's lead, and through Franco it is hoped to enlist Italy, now, with an in creasing navy, an ally worth having. Thus to-day, there is a more complete European alliance against England than has existed for a long period. Such, then, is the true significance of the flashy ceremonies lately witnessed the Russian court. THE CALF PATH. One day through the pr'meval wood, A calf walked home, as good calves should; But made a trial nil bent askew, A crooked trail, as all calves do. SincQ then two hundred years have fled, And, I Infer, the calf is dead. But still he left behind his trail. And thereby hangs a mortal tale. The trail was taken up next day. By a lone dog that passed that way. And then a wise bell-weather sheep. Pursued the trail, o'er vale and steep, And drew the llock behind him, too, As good bell-weathers always do. And from that day, o'er hill and glade, Through those old woocLs a path was made, And many men woufcd In and out, And dodged and turned and bent about, And uttered words of righteous wrath; Because 'twas such a crooked path; But still they follow—do not laugh— The first migration of that calf. And throughthis winding woodway stalked || WHEN THIEVES FALLOUT. || By IUICS SHARP. HE freight steamer eif Jtussiau Bear was m thrashing along A ffi '3 down the Pacific 3 Ocean with her * Tr\ blunt prow facing south, and the cap tain reckoned ho was somewhere off the Queen Char lotte Islands. The Bear was an iron ship of old-fashioned build and as slow as they make 'em; any old thing on the ocean could pass her; yet, pro tem.,she was a passenger boat and was bringing down the last of the season's crop of Klondike miners. She was reputed to have over $5,000,000 worth of gold dust and nuggets on board and her coming was watched for with some anxiety. On the morning of the 7tb the cap tain noticed on the western horizon what appeared to be a steamer coming towards him. As craft are scarce on these waters, except in the sealing season, the captain watched the stranger's approach with interest not unmixed with anxiety, because of the valuable cargo he had aboard. The sea was calm for the time of year, and the steamer seemed to be making for ncross the hows of the Bear. The cap tain ordered the flag hoisted, but the oncoiner showed no auswering colors, which did not tend to make the cap tain feel less uneasy. She was a trim craft, looking like a private yacht, painted black with two slim, tapering masts set at a rakish slope in line with her one funnel. She came swiftly through the water and turned her broadside toward the Russian Bear, when the man at the wheel calculated that she was as near as was safe, and her engines slowed down so that the stranger's speed more nearly accorded with the slow progress the larger ship was making. A man on the bridge came to the edge nearest the Blower vessel and placing his hands to his month, shouted: "Ship ahoy. Is that the Russian Bear?" "Who are you?" roared the captain; "and what do you want?" "I want an answer to my question; then I'll tell you what more I want." After speaking, however, the new comer did not wait for an answer, but gave a command to the man at the wheel, who promptly signaled for the jngines to stop, whereupon the yacht dropped to the rear, notwithstanding the slowness of the old Bear. The , name was plainly painted on the stern, md the captain of the yacht having seen that this was the ship he was after moved quickly alongside again, this time with only a couple of hun dred feet of water between the two ships. During the slight interval the crew of the yacht had been busy, and now a forbidding looking cannon point -led its ominous muzzle toward the I Bear. | "I'm after tho gold, captain," said the first speaker, nonchalantly, "as no doubt you are aware. I'm going to have it quietly or I'm going to sink your ship. Which is it to be?" "Whatever gold we have on board, if we have any, isn't mine. 1 don't see what good the sinking of the ship will do you, and it would be very in convenient to me. Better sheer off and we'll say no more about it. I can take a joke as well as the next man." For a time it looked as if the strang er heeded the good advice given him. The captain of the yacht rang full Bpeed ahead and the sharp prow cut the water like a knife. The yacht de scribed a large circle and seemed to be showing off its paces, but this, as I the captain of the Bear remarked, was unnecessary, for he already knew that any scow on the Pacific could pass him. However, it was soon evident that this was not the intention of the enemy. Ranging alongside once more, but this time further away, there was a cloud of smoke from the cannon, a sharp report and the crash of render ing plates. A jagged hole had been torn in the ship'H side near the bul warks, which, while it did no harm, scarcely improved the appearance of the Bear. On£e more the yacht swung around the circle and again ranged alongside within a distance of a hundred yards. "Haul down the flag," said the cap lain of the big Hteamer. "Well, captain," began tho young man on the bridge when at speaking distance, "a practical lesson is worth Any amount of talk. I merely wished to convince you that we know how to handle our guns and that our guns can penetrate your rotten plates. Besides, you will have something to show for your motley when you get to port. I it wo have no further trouble, but I'll give you five minutes more if { you wish to consult together." because he wabbled when he walked. This forest path became a lane; That bent and turned and turned again. This crooked lane became a road. Where many a poor horse, with Ills load, Toiled on beneath the burning sun, And traveled some three miles in one. And thus a century and a half. They trod the footsteps of that calf. The years passed on in swiftness lleet, The road became a village street, And this, before the men were aware, A city's crowded thoroughfare. And soon the central street was this. Of a renowned metropolis. And men two centuries and a half, Trod in the footsteps of that calf; Each day a hundred thousand rout Followed tho zigzag calf about. And o'er his crooked journey went, The trafllc of a continent. A hundred thousand men were led i By one calf near three centuries dead. The miners hail no desire to be drowned, neither did they wish to give up their gold. 4 'Get him aboard, captain," said their leader, " and we'll have a fight for it. We are all heeled, and once we get that villain and part of his crew on deck here, you keep out of the way if you like, and we'll handle him." "You couldn't run down tliat pirate, I suppose?" suggested another, more cautious than the rest. "No more than I could run down Queen Charlotte's islands with this craft," replied the captain dolefully. "Time!" shouted the man on the bridge. "We'll give you the gold," said the captain, returning to his place. "All right. And so thnt there will be no temptation to play us any tricks, for the amount I understand is demor alizingly large, I will stay here and receive your packages. Two of my men will go aboard you, and two others will work the ferry between your craft and mine. Those four men I can easily spare, and if you kill or capture them you are welcome to do so, but in that case I shall undoubted ly sink the ship. If you will think over the crisis for a moment you will see that nothing else is left for me to do. It is the only safe plan; therefore I trust there will be no trouble." There wasn't. The miners saw at once that there was little use in making a row, and in a short time the precions cargo was transferred from the ship to the yacht. It came in boxes and bags, in large quantities and in small, and the mau on the bridge opened every package so that there was no chance of fooling him. When the transfer was complete the young man sang out: "I wish you good day, captain, and a safe voyage. It may strike you as strange that I do not sink the ship now and so destroy all evidence against me. I assure you that I gave the plan the deepest consideration, and if, unfortunately, one life had been lost, you would all have gone to the bottom, but, as it is, this is only robbery or piracy, and I believe they don't hang for that now, so I chance your evidence against me, for I will be disembarked long before you can reach the nearest telegraph office. So, if I were you, I would plug right along to San Francisco and not give me the trouble of calling at Victoria or any of those intervening ports. Well, so long," The yacht moved away from the ship at a speed which showed that all hope of keeping her in sight for long was hopeless. With sad hearts the plundered passengers watched her grow smaller and smaller to the south of them, while the Bear churned her leisurely course through the waveless sea. At last the lookout shouted: "The yacht's coming back, sir." The captain put his glasses to his eyes and gazed for a long time at the horizon to the south. "By jingo, she is," he said, turning a triHe less ruddy. Then he said to the mate, "What do you think of it?" "He's probably changed his mind and is going to sink us. I thought he didn't seem to be more than half con vinced when ho talked of not doing it. What are we to do?" "I don't know anything to do," said the captain hopelessly, swearing inwardly that if he escaped he would have a faster steamer next voyage or quit the high seas. Everyone aboard was now watching the northern bound yacht, and the same disquieting thought seemed to run through every mind, even before one of the passengers gave voice to his fears. Suddenly the captain cried out with his glasses still to his eyes: "So help me! It's not the same yacht. Look, Joe!" The mate examined the approach ing steamer and coincided with the i captain's view. Soon all doubt was set at rest. The oncoming boat was seen to be much larger than the yacht and apparently much faster, speedy as the other had seemed in comparison with the Russian Bear. A big black bearded giaut with a voice like a fog horn was in command. He wasted 110 time in talk, but sent a shot towards the Bear, a shot that skipped along the water and sank without coming within dangerous distance. Once more the Russian Bear lowered her Hag, slowed down and stopped. The other came up with her. "We want what gold you have on board," roared the man with the whis kers. "We haven't any," replied the cap tain; "we've been—" "I know better. You have $5,000,- 000 worth of the stuff with you and I'll have it without any more I'm not running a moonlight excur sion with a brass hand on boartL Surrender, or I'll sink you." "You're too late. We've been robbed already." "Oh, that's too thin. Every jnan hold up his hands; we're going to lay alongside and the man that moves gets shot." "You're wasting valuable time," said the captain, "come round to the other side and see the shot he put through us, if you don't believe me. We don't get such marks .as this on moonlight excursions, either." "Here's the shot that came through the side," corroborated the mate, hold ing it up in his hands. All on board cried aloud that this was true, and the pirate made an emphatic remark re garding his future destination, which was as likely as not prophetic. "Didn't you meet a rakish-looking, black-hulled yacht about half the size of your own?" "Yes, and it seemed to me at the time she sheered off and showed that she didn't want to be hailed. But as we didn't, either, I took no notice. Thunder! I can overhaul her before she reaches port. Any idea where she was making for?" "No, but as her master c\dvised not to drop into Victoria, I eusper butter after milking rather than | during the progress of milk formation. Setting; KaaplierrleH In the Fnll. Most of the small fruits, excepting, perhaps, the strawberry, do as well set in the fall as in the spring. In lati- I tudes north of Ohio spring is the safest ' time, though good results have been I obtained from fall setting in latitudes much farther north by using plenty of mulch. Most of my experience has been with spring setting, but a few I years ago I failed to get a full stand of plants and so I tried to fill out the vacancies that fall; where I set on well-drained ground so that the plants would not have wet feet during the winter I had very good success, but some of the plantation was on low ground aud many of the plants were killed out. Here is a point which is often a mystery to many—why some years their canes kill back worse than others? If by any agency the growth of canes are prolonged in tho fall their chances of ripening or hardening are lessened. Late cultivation, undue moisture in the soil, or excessive fer tility are all agents in this delay, and so, for good results, we must seek to obtain conditions of soil which are not detrimental to the point. I set my plants four by six feet so that I can uee the cultivator bpth ways. This saves a great deal of hand hoeing and weeding; besides, where only rowed one way they soon mass into a continuous row, which will gradually encroach on the cultivator until it gets two or three feet wide, making a mass of bushes in which the fruit, will be hidden and hard to pick; besides, weeds and grasses are sure to find a foothold which will eventually ruin the plantation. Another advantage of hill culture is that the berries are more perfectly developed and firmer. When the 1 growth of canes are left undisturbed the whole season, most of the strong fruit buds are at their top; then when cut back later it leaves most of the weak buds for tho next season's fruit. This is. one of the advantages advocated by many for piuching back the canes when only eighteen or twenty inches high; then laterals will be thrown out, and on these will form the fruit burs for the future crop. These laterals are less easily broken over with their load of fruit than a single cane. After raspberries come into bearing a mulch is of considerable value in ; maturing a crop, especially in a dry j season. Coarse manure is best, if it i can be had; it can be placed on in the fall so that the rains may carry the j plant food down to the roots, where it j will be in readiness when needed. Then when the "dry spell" comes the coarse refuse will serve to keep the soil moist and cool, which will be just what the roots need to mature a crop. If this mulch is not extended more than a foot each way from the hill the soil can be frequently stirred, which in itself is equal to the manure.—B. A. Wood, in the Epitomist.