The speed of the fastest Atlantic | steamer is now greater than that of the express trains oa Italian railways. There is a deal of "yellow journal ism" in these reports about the yellow metal in Alaska, maintains the Louis- , ville Courier-Journal. A mill employing fifty men is now engaged in making paper from the bagasse, or sugarcane refuse, which was once the greatest nuisance to the sugar grower. Apartment life has grown so uni versal in Paris, according to a special writer, that no such thing as a home exists in the French capital. Inas much as there is no such word as home in the Freuch language, the thing itself may not bo so much missed. The King of Denmark is still estab lishing his claim to be called the father-in-law of Europe. A grand daughter has just been married to the third son of King Oscar. There are few royal families not connected in some way to the dynasty of King Christian. Russia's average annual export of wheat reaches nearly 50,000,000 bushels, but this year she will not have enough for her own people, put ting on the overworked but willing Americau eagle the responsibility of keeping the bread in their mouths. That generous and conscientious fowl will not be found wanting in this emergency or any other which cau be met by tilting its copious horn of plenty, this year more overflowing than usual. General Lew Wallace and Rev. Dr. W. H. Hickman, Vice-Chancellor of Depauw University, have raised a storm of protests because of highhand ed criticisms of the wheel. During the reception of a well-drilled com mandery at Orawfordsvilie, and while General Wallace was making the wel coming address, he claimed that the best appearing mou were those who had received a military training, and he took occasion to deprecate the use of bicycles, saying that the riders looked more like monkeys than men, and that bicycling was time wasted. It remained, however, for Dr. Hickman to come out flatfooted in denouncing the use of bicycles for women. He declares that it is one of the most baneful agencies ever invented in so far as it concerns the gentler sex. It takes the yonng woman from her homo and home duties; its tendencies are altogether wrong. He also asserts that it affords a means of easy escape from the restrictions of conventionality, and is harmful from a hygienic stand- Point. Assistant Chief Alexander Scott of the division of drafting of the Patent Office has an interesting list of the patents granted to women inventors of the United States, compiled from 1790 to January 1, 1895. Up to that period there had been issued 531,018 patents to all persons, the number of women included being surprisingly large. The : articles ou which the patents have boon granted compriso everything in | the patentable liue, from a curling iron i to a cooking stove, aud from a war vessel to a handsaw. While many of j ihe patents are no objects of peculiar interest to women, many of them are on scientific machines, objects of war- | fare, miners' utensils and things which i would bo only useful to the male por tion of humanity. Of course, the baby has not been forgotten, and the articles patented to make the "mother's joy" j more comfortable and contented form a department all to themselves. Col lar buttons have been invented by wives, mothers and sweethearts. Evi- j dently this was done to ease the mas- ! culine mind or nrevent the accustomed, or, at least, accredited, profanity which is supposed to flow when one of the buttons becomes detached from a garment and rolls somewhere out of reach or "cannot possibly be found." "We have found," said Mr. Scott to the Star reporter, "that the objects patented by women are of just as prac ticable a nature as those gotten out by the men. Very often it happens that men invent an object which is of in terest exclusively to womankind, as a new style of hair fixer, but the reverse is often the case. It frequently hap pens ihat a woman will suggest some thing to her husband, or some male member of the family, who acts upon it, taking out the patent and getting credit for it, of course, fully with the consent of the one suggesting the idea. Any one who thinks that a woman is incapable of inventing anything really useful is making a great mistake, as a look over the list of the thousands of objects will testify. Some of the most important things in use nowadays have been invented by women and brought into general use by them.'* THE DAY BEYOND. (7 hen youth is with us, all things see® But lightly to bo wishe