Tue war nas cost all told about §150,000,000, b it it i 3 worth it many tii es over, thinks the Ne.v York l'ress. A certain Episcopal clergyman is in favor of compelling all clergymen of tho church to say tho morning and evouiug service daily, because it would improve the vocal utterances of the ministers. The Siberian railroad is offering great inducements t travelers. It provides not merely parlor aud sleep ing cars, but one fitted with a gymna sium and Russian bathi, a dark room for photographers aid a stationary bicycle, ou which oua may make cen tury runs without leaving the train. It h not supposed that political exiles will travel iu such cars. But then their number is growing less and that of free travelers iu that land of vast e'(pauses uud vast possibilities is growing rapidly larger. The loss on the Loiter wheat deal keeps growing. It is estimated now nf §10,000,000, a sum that will come near to cleaning out the fortune ac cumulated by so many laborious years in the dry goads trade. While the house of Letter is thus bowel low in humiliation and financial distro s by the son who was its pride, it is sud denly flooded with glory by the as cent of its daughter to the viceregal throne of India. Jhe Loiter family is oue for which Dr. Schenk's ilea would have no charms, says the New York Journal. Tho details of the journey of tho Monterey and the collier Brutus, now sately at Manila, will unquestionably prove of great interest to American I and European shipbuilders. While the Monterey took her time to get to Mauila, that she got there is a tri umph lor the American navy, as she is not intended cither for service or a journey on tho high seas. Leaving Han Diego 011 June 11, the Monterey arrive! at Honolulu June 21, and left f>r Manila June 3 \ Arriving there ! Augistd, she thus took just about live weeks to cover the 503 ) and more j nautical miles fro 11 Hawaii. As a result of tho recent conviction of a sailor for stealing tiie sigualling book of a British warship a most em phatically worded note oil the subject has been issued by the admiralty to the commander of e very English man of-war The stolen bonk was one of a series which are never supposed to be even seen by any one but the corn niauder and the officer next in rank, and as a consequence each command er is informed in the note just issued that he will be held personally re sponsible for the perservatiou of the secrecy of such volumes. The utoleu bock happened to be out of date, but the admiralty officials evidently re gard the incident as .1 matter of seri ous moment. Spain is the only European country whose manufacturing industries are known to be declining. The manu factures, moreover, arc very few aud unimportant, and the entire number of operatives in the kingdom is not larger than that of u half-dozen of the principal manufacturing cities iu New England. Spain imports twice the cotton goods and four times the silk goods that she exports, and these ex ports are made ehielly to tho Spanish colonies, in which ths market has greatly fallen off. Spain is rich in iron, lead, zinc copper and quicksil ver, aud with her .dmirable commer cial location might supply the Medit erranean countries with manufactures nud have little com2>etition. Ever since the Russian admiralty de cided to re-establish, the naval head quarters of the Bla 'k Sea squadron at Nicolaieff, instead of Sebastopol,great excitement has prevailed in the Jew ish quarter at the former port. Ac cording to Iluss au law, no Jew muy reside at a first-class naval port,unless be can show that he has been previ ously domiciled in tho same place for thirty years. About a year and a half ago formal permission was given to the Jews at Nicolaieff to buy and bold landed property. Since then, owing to the rapid commercial and industrial development of the town, the Jews have been engaged in extensive spec ulation in all kinds of immovable property. It is now stated ou good authority that on the impending re turn of the naval headquarters the law previously referred to is to be put into active operation. The result will be that at least one-third of the twelve or thirteen thousand Jews now resi dent at Nicolaieff will be expelled. In such cases, of course, there is no con fiscation of property, but enormous losses will bo liinde inevitable by com pulsory sales. EILEEN. She Is the sweetest maiden Aud loveliest, I ween: She Is the sweetest maiden Tlmt ever man has seen. No skies are drear When she is near. When tender words of Jove I hear From sweet Eileen. ller pretty Jips are rosy, The rosiest ever seen; Iler pretty lips are rosy. With gleaming pearls between. There is no bliss To equal this— One long and clinging, loving kiss From sweet Eileen. llow tender are the glances Aglow with Cnnld's sheen; How tender are th • glances That beam from eyes serene! With sweet surprise There sudden rise Such melting glances from the eyes Of sweet Eileen. She Is the sweetest maiden, And loveliest, I ween: She is the sweetest maiden That ever man has seen. I'll ne'er resign This maiden mine, But worship ever at the shrine Of sweet Eileen. —St. Paul's. 0000300300 0000000000233300 gRARNEY ROLLINS' § g CROWN OF GLORY. | O o 00 0 GO 0 3 OOOOOG OQGODOOOCO ft G O 'l' the time Barney Rollins was fifteen yeiu ' B old to lost every spear of his (Exliair as the result of |4gSjj®\ sickness; thereby he became the laughing stock of his own family and of all the |p? off jjHjV other families in his He was quickly . nicknamed "Baldy" * by the boys of his "gang." Mamie O'Konrke, whose esteem Barney held above nil price, and who had singled him out, before his illness, for her smiles nud favors, pitied where formerly she had ad mired, aud was kind but condescend ing. Even the tiniest street urchin hooted him,' as the childreu in the Bible story hooted the prophet, Elisha. Though they did not use the precise words of those childreu, "Go up, thou bald : head," they used words just ns nn j pleasant to hear, and Barney, unlike the Hebn.-v prophet, had no she-bears at his cow ronnd. At fifteen a boy sets great store by bis personal appearance ; j and it must not be imagined that, be | cause he lived at the end of a grimy, 1 cluttered, six-foot-wide alley, in u rickety tenement on which the sun shone not more than fifteen minutes a day, Br.y.ey Bollins did not have as much pride as boys of the same age who are better boused. On the contrary, Barney telt his misfortune quite ns keenly as many a j pampered little aristocrat would have j done, forj he was a boy of an excep tionally fine-grained nature, nud his j very soul was embittered by this dis figurement which a coarser-fibred boy would not have minded. Down town, one day, Barney saw, in tho show-window of a theatrical supply-shop, a fine array of wigs, aud among them one that in color and tex ture seemed so exact a copy of his own departed hair that his heart was in his mouth in an instant. The sight thrilled him through and through. Braving certain ridicule, he entered the shop nudinqtiired the price. "Ten . dollars!" For him, at that moment it might as well have been ten thousand. Never mind; he must aud would have that wig! Easy enough to resolve, but how to achieve, with his slender rosources? The place he had held before his ill ness, as errand-boy for a large dry ; goods firm, bad been given back to him, aud was worth three dollars and ; fifty cents a week. Bat every cent of | this had to be given up for the sup port of the family, aud Barney knew j well enough it would bo no use to try to divert any of it to himself. Ho was not inclined to cheat his parents, and had he been he could not by any chance have done it; they were too vigilant for that. To get the wig be must earn more money, aud to earn more money he must liavo more work. The extra in come from the extra work would be all his own; for to this his parents— so at least it seemed to Barney—could hare no righteous claim. As nothing better suggested itself, Barney put bis resolution into effect by returning to the early morning boot cleaning and paper selling he had been glad to give up when he bad attained to tho dignity ufa position in a dry goods house. He also found chances to deliver goods for fish markets and meat markets on Thurs day and Saturday nights respectively. Later on he bargained with one of his boy friends, who was employed daily from noon to midnight setting up tenpins in tho bowling alley at an athletic club, aud who wanted his evenings free, to take the last five hours of the work off his hands. Barney's parents never questioned his late hours, and were quite in different to his goings and comings; so he had no trouble in keeping from them the fact of his new employment; but he found it hard, indeed, being still weak from his illness, to bolt his supper and hurry away to night work after eight hours of day work; aud it was also hard to give up the evening frolics in which he had been accus tomed to joiuwith the boss. For a bank he used the toe of an old shoe, which he kept tucked under his mattress. Every night he lodged something therein, copper, nickel or silver, and every night he counted and recounted the contents. Finally, at the end of almost three months, the night came when ho was to round out the needed sum with the last coin. Trembling with excitement, he thrust his hand under the mattress. For a moment his heart beat so wildly that he could feel the hot blood surging to bis temples; then it seemed to stop, and he felt cold and sick aud fuint, for his exploring fingers failed to discover the familiar and welcome roughness of the rain-stiffened old shoe. When he had pushed his arm in to tho shoulder, aud had eveu turned the bedding up and looked as well as felt, be realized that further efforts were vniu. The shoe was gone; the fruit of three months' unremitting labor stolon. Barney dared not raiso an outcry ; to do so would ouly mean to share bis secret with tlie members of his family, and thus thwart at the outset all his plans. Toward morning, as he lay tossing on his despoiled mattress, un able to close his eye 3 for grief and bitterness, ho heard his father's un steady footsteps on the stairs. They came nearer and nearer, until the for bidding figure, with its dishevelled hair aud rum-laden breath aud brutal ized features, stood beside tho bed. Instinctively the boy slid as far away as the narrow limits of the cot per mitted; but the movement betrayed the faot that he was awake, and his father, seizing him by the arm, dragged him, with an oath, into tho middle of the room. "I'll teach ye to steal, you limb o' sntanl" cried the drink-crazed man. "O father; I didn't steal; don'tjjbeat me!" protested Barney. "The money's mine, I earned very cent of it working nights. I did, honest, father." "Earned it, did ye? an' hid it away from your poor, hard-workin' parents! You ungrateful whelp; I'll teach ye to be livin' in aiso an' idleness, an' layin' up money like a miser, an' kapiu' it from yer betters, an' me sbweatin' me life away carryiu' the hod up a ladder all day!" And then, with a heavy atrip of board brought borne that day for kind ling-wood, from the building where he was at work, the half-drunken father beat the boy until tho lad's screams brought Mrs. F.ollins to the point of determined interference. From the shook of his great disap pointment Barney rallied with cheer ful courage aud determination. This time he took his mothei into his con fidence. Mrs. Bollins, if not in all respects a model mother, was at least a kind hearted one, and she showed her good will by aiding the boy in his endeavor to keep the secret from the unreason able father, and by giving him a nickel or dime now nud then from her wages as scrub-woman. They decided be tween them that the surest way to out wit the father was to take the money, as fast as it was earned, to a neighbor ing branch of the Stamp Savings So ciety, and to leave the book of deposit in the society's care. In this way the saving went on smoothly, aud success was again al most within reach. Barney's heart beat high with happiness and hope. Bat on the day when the ten dollars was ouco more complete, he came home at midnight from his work in the bowling-alley, to find the light burning iu the tenement, and his mother sittiug anxiously beside the eot where his little five-year-old sister Aggie lay tossing nud moaning. For several days she had not seemed well, aud since Bnruey had left her at sup per-time she had grown rapidly worse. Aggie was the one thing the boy loved most of all iu the world. There were other children between himself and Aggie in age; there were others younger than she, and Barney was far from being indifferent to any nf them. But Aggie was the very apple of his eye. Ho had tended her in her cradle as gently as a woman, aud had managed always, by book or by crook, to keep her in dolls and toys. Where Aggie was concerned ho had never stopped to count the cost of anything. The dispensary physician, who was called in, pronounced tho dread name of typhoid fever. For several days he came, and doubtless he did for the child all that skill aud faithfulness could do. But Barney aud his mother shared largely in the prejudices of their class ngaiust, dispensary treat ment, and as the little ono constantly grew worse, they became alarmed about Uer, nud on the strength of the tea dollars which Barney had saved, sent for a physician of much local repute. Tho weeks that followed were anxious aud wearisome ones for Barney. Aggie went to the very threshold of death, but she did not cross it, and the loving brother bad the infinite satisfaction of believing— though more likely than not he was wrong iu his belief—that the happy issue was entirely due to the skill of the physician his money had made possible. After the little sister had recovered aud the doctor had been paid, Barney began again to set aside tho dimes aud nickels for the purpose which he still kept in mind; but things are always going at cross-purposes in the Bollins household. There have been overdue wood nnd coal bills, butchers' and grocers' accounts to pay, and shoes to buy for the children. There are many, many imperative demands where a family is large, tho father a drunkard aud the income small. Nearly two years have passed since Barney Bollins began saving money for a wig. His head is still jnst as smooth and shiny; and his sensitive ness just as keen as at the beginning. The boys still call him "Baldy." Mamie O'Bourke still treats him with a pity ing condescension harder to bear than downright abuse. He is working and saving still, just as if nothing had hap pened; always hopeful, sustained in his disheartening efforts by the vision of himself as he will appear, once the coveted wig is in its place. He earns more now, and the time is sure to come, if he keeps on, when he will be able to purchase something in the w ay of head-gear far more suitable 1 the paltry ten-dollar "scratch wig" he has set his heart on, beautiful as that seems to him now. In the meautime, though he does not suspect it, Barney liollins's bald head is a veritable crown of glory; and to those of us who know his simple history the light of the lamps in the bowling-alley where he works, makes, as it is reflected from that shining bald head, a halo of which no saint need be ashamed,—Youth's Companion, WISE WORDS. A useless life is only an early death. —Goethe. An ounce of plnck is worth a ton of luck.—James A. Garfield. A great mind will neither give an affront nor bear it.—Home. The flower of meekness grows on a stem of grace.—Montgomery. There is nothing half so sweet ia life as love's young dream.—Moore. The sure way to miss success is to miss the opportunity.—P. Charles. Recollection is the only paradise from which we cannot be turned out. —Richtcr. There is not a string attuned to to mirth but has its chord of melan choly.—Hood. After all, our worst misfortunes never L-appon and most miseries lie in anticipation.—Balzac. Nothing is imposssiblo to the man who can and will do; this is the only law of success.—Mirabeau. "When a man bas not a good reason for doing a thing he has one good rea son for letting it alone.—Walter Scott. To be always thinking about your manners is uot the way to make them good; the very perfection of manners is not to think nbout yourself.— V/hately. Passinj- of Spanish ICute. Spain held sway in the Americas for 148,203 actual days before agreeing to finally abandon ail that Columbus gave her. That means 405 years, nine mouths and seventeen days, al lowing for the difference between tho old and new style of reckoning. The Spanish flag was first raised on this continent by Columbus on San Salvador—now British territory—on Friday morning, October 12, 1492. It disappeared from Guiana, which finally went into the hands of the English, Dutch and French, 1613. Brazil and Uruguay went to Portu-, gal, who claimed them under treaty 1634. Jamaica taken by Great Britain, 1655. The Bahamas taken by Great Brit ain, 1680. Hayti went to France and was called St. Dominique, 1795. Chili became independent, 1817. Florida ceded to the United States, 1819. Mexico became independent, 1821. Colombia, New Grenada, Peru, Paraguay, Ecuadoraud Bolivia, under the leadership of Simon Bolivar, threw off the Spanish yoke, 1824. Argentina attained independence, 1842. \ enczue'a attained independence, 1845. Spain ngreed with the United States to relinquish all claim of sov ereignty over the Inst of her posses sions on the Western Continent August 9, 1838.—New York Herald. 11 ow lie Got Customer*. A Western farmer who had been selling his milk for two cents a quart thought he would try for a part of the trade of a small town near him when the retail price was five cents. He invited tho people to come out to his farm upon a certain day, and he showed them over the farm, exhibited his stock and explained his system of feeding and general management. Then came the milking. The milk men came out with clean shirts and snow-white aprons, bringing pails of hot aud cold water. They thoroughly washed their hands, and then the ud ders and teats of tho cows with warm water and castile soap, rinsing them carefully aud wiping dry. The ves sels for holding the milk were bright and clean, the stables and stalls were clean. The milk was strained, uerated, quickly cooled and placed in a cool, clean cellar. All the details were explained to the, visitors as the work progressed, and they went home satisfied that there they could obtain clean and wholesome milk. The next day he sought customers and found a market for nil he could supply at six cents a quart, or a cent above the mar ket rate in the town, aud it was but little more trouble to deliver it than to have carried it to the railroad sta tion and send it to Chicago for two cents a quart.— American Cultivator. Exportlnc House-Boats. The house-boat and tender which were built for La Conitesse de Beam of Paris have arrived safely at their destination after a voyago of three weeks. The route taken after safely crossing the Channel—which occupied twelve hours from Gravesend—was via Calais, aud the small rivers and canals between there and Conflaus, where the River Seine is entered, about forty miles below Paris. Horses and tugs were the means of locomotion. Con siderable interest was shown all along the route, these being not only the first boats of this description to cross the Channel, but the first ones ever seen on French waters.—Birmiughar Post. Thro# Beautiful Women. A famous artist whoso opinion was asked as to whom he considered some of the most beautiful women of the (lay mentioned three in particular as specially typical of their respective countries—the Conitesse de Pourtales in France, the Countess of Warwick in England and the Chicago belle, Miss Nannie Leiter, in the United States. Women In Ancient Britain. In Britain the old Celtic and Teu tonic customary laws left woman free. History tells of Martia, the Queen of London, 320 B. C., whose able statutes outlived the Roman, Auglo-Saxon and Norse invasions. These, the earliest laws of Great Britain, now 2200 yeais old, were made by a woman. By Magna Chart a women had a vote in the House of Lords. As a rule, those women who had a title aud a place in the peerage sent men, usually their husbands, to represent them. In this way they gradually lost what to about a dozen women in England is really a legal privilege. A Pretty Gown For Slender Women. An extremely pretty gown for a slonder woman is of black dotted tulle over white moire with applications of black lace outlining the apron front. The bodice is made in jacket form with a short basque and wide rovers. The jacket is encircled by the lace ap pliques and the revers are of shirred white moiißseliuo de soie. A vest of pale amber-colored mousselino and a big cravat bow at the throat is a soft and pretty finishing touch. The hat trimmed to be woru with this gown is of whito straw turned back from the face with loops of black velvet and several yellow roses. PettlcoAts. It is a vary serious question what is the best petticoat to wear with thin gowns that have no stiffening in them. Skirts need to haug right in order to look well, and in order to accomplish this it is necessary to have a well-fitted, well-hung petticoat. This petticoat must be made like n regular dress skirt, fitted over the hips, with full ness at the hack, and put on to a band or yoko. About at tho knee is a deep flounce, either a Spanish flounce or an accordion-pleated one, trimmed with many small ruffles. Where the flounce joins the skirt may be a narrow feather bone, and there should also be a feath er bone run through the lowest ruffle. These skirts must bo as long as the dress skirt, otherwise an ugly gap shows where tho petticoat ends. — Harper's Bazar. A Pretty Blouse. Although blouses and skirts can bo bought at such reasonable prices, yet there are occasions when the übiquit ous remnant appeals to us so forcibly that we deem it worth the labor of converting it into a bodice or skirt, ns the case may be. For the former no prettier model could be selected than the following: The front is tacked in sections, be tween each of which is laid a row of the new linen luce. The back has tucks running obliquely from shoulder to waist, where the rows of laee, laid toward each other, meet and slightly overlap. The belt ia of soft satin, fin ishing with and fastening under a smart made bow. Muslin or cambric or even silk would look well for this blouse, and it can be made also of chine silk, with kilts of aerophane in lien of lace. The Coming Medallion*. Oxidized silver medallions nro the coming fad. They come in all sizes frqui the heavy plaque, ten inches in circumference, which is hnng against a background of velvet or satin and placed in the curio cabinet, to the tiny bangle not bigger than a teu-cont piece. The latter are often made with uneven edges and look like old coins. Some of these trifles are merely little love tokens or pretty little presents, and bear on one side a fanciful profile of a man or maiden and on the reverse a line or two from one of Shakes peare's sonnets or Heine's love songs. Others are patriotic and have on one side a basso-reliovo head of Dewey or Sampson, aud on the other the date of the battle of Manila or Santiago and the army aud navy flag. Hansen me dallions bear a portrait of the explorer and a little history of his achieve ments, and the medals commemorat ing the coronation of young Wil lielmina of Holland, which promise to be in great demand when they make their appearance, are to show her de termined majesty in the headdress of the Dutch jicasant.—St. Louis Re publio. (lol.lp. Of the 400,000 teachers in the United States 268,000 are women. Nearly one-fifth of the students at Swißs universities are women. Helen Keller, the deaf, dumb and blind prodigy, rides a tandem. It is said that 150,000 women are making a living in the United States as typewriters. The number of women clerks in the United States has quadrupled within the past twenty-flve years. Mrs. Edison, wife of the great in ventor, is very active in church and charitable work, and is also prominent in the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. Mrs. J. M. Ball, wife of the pastor ? Methodist Episcopal Church at arfehiugton, Minn., supplied the pulpit on a recent Sunday iu the absence of her husband. Mrs. Marion Lei and, of New York, lias developed a new iudustry by giv ing readings of newspaper clippings of Hobson's exploit and the cutting of the cables at Cardenas. Miss Georgia L. Chamberlain, of Chicago, is Secretary of tho American Institute of Sacred Literature, an organization which provides facilities for Bible study at home. Miss Emily Means, who has been elected principal of Abbot Academy, Andover, Mass., was graduated from Abbot Academy in 'G9, and was con nected with the faculty as a teacher from 1878 to 1892. Apropos of Russia and its ideas of women's rights, it is odd to learu that the Russian police are strictly en forcing the law that no female cyclist shall ride through the streets of St. Petersburg unless clad in bifurcated garments. Caroline Croft, formerly Caroline Abigail Brewer, of Boston, has left §IOO,OOO to two prominent physicians of that city for investigations to find some way of curing cancer, consump tion aud other diseases now regarded as incurable. Mrs. Emmons Blaine has just given §25,000 to the University of Chicago. She wishes the money to be used to establish in the downtown district of Chicago n branch institution for tho highor education of teachers iu the public schools. Mrs. Catharine Parr Traill, the old est living author iu Queen Victoria's dominions, is now living in rather straitened circumstauces at her home iu Lakefield, Out. She is ninety-seven years of age, and has maintained literary activity for more than eighty years. Mrs. Grace Richards Woodward, who sang by request of President Dole the first American song iu Hawaii, "Columbia, tho Gem of the Ocean," after the news of annexation reached the island, was graduated from Drew Seminary for Young Wom en, Carmel, N. Y., in Juno, 1890, and received at the commencement exor cises the prize for the greatest progress made during the year in vocal music. Seen In the Stores. Dotted printed swiss. Printed Liberty satin. Colored lawn petticoats. Blouse dimity shirt waists. Ladies' tan cloth laced shoes. Feather and mousseline boas. Plain and jetted nets for waists. Ready-mado boned dress linings. Shirt waists of corded gingham. Tncked skirts of linen and crash. Taffeta waists with braided effects. Link buttons of a ball and uniform button. Ribbon-trimmed foulard dresse3 for little girls. Liberty satin foulard in scroll aud floral patterns. Corded shirt waists very much bloused in front. Tan-colored gowns with rod velvet belt and collar. Heavy black taffeta with a satiny gloss for odd skirts. Light aud medium colored velvet for belts and collars. Black grenadine over colored silk for elderly womej. Japanese cotlon draperies with sil ver and gilt printing. Ecru cotton stuffs embroidered in colors for bedspreads. Unliued black satin coats with a false front of lace, chiffon, etc. Lovely green rush, wicker and white enameled summer furniture. Jacket suits of plain and mixed serge, covert oloth, whipoord, etc. Piece goods of satin braided with gold thread and appliqued with net. Printed silk muslin for gowns less transparent than mousseline de soie. Shirt waists of black and white striped silk bayadere and lengthwise. Evening waists of alternate rowa of chiffon puffing and laco insertion used lengthwise.—Dry Goods Economist. A Pleasant Way to be Cureil. A Transvaal doctor is credited with tho discovery of a new curative treat ment. He asserts that he con cure persons of smallpox, fevers, diphtheria and many other maladies by simply wrapping them in milk sheets. The patient is laid on n mattress covered with blankets, and iB packed in a sheet just large enough to envelop the body. Tho sheet has been saturated iu a pint and a half of warm milk, and is ap plied to the body without wringing. After lying still for an hour thus swathed, the patient is sponged with warm water, or put into a warm bath for a few moments to remove the milk. The treatment is based on the germ absorbing power of milk, and the iden of it is said to have been suggested by the fact that milk absorbs poisonous germs from a bucket in which it has been standing.—St. Louis Globe- Democrat. There are more than a dozen con cerns manufacturing horseless car riages in the United States. DOMESTICATED WOLVES. They Mate With Farmers' Dugs AiraylTp in Minnesota. Notwithstanding the fact that great wolf hunts are held in Miuuesota every year, when hundreds of the animals are slaughtered, the number of the brutes is apparently increasing. In many instauces they are so devoid ol fear that they mate freely with the dogs owned by the farmers, and the result is that dozens of creatures lialj dog half wolf are making their appear" ance in Anoka, Minn. In this connection John Andersi n, a farmer residing a few miles north ot Anoka, tells au interesting story. For mauy months he had occasionally seen his handsome collie dog in company with two female wolves, which made a practice of coming to the farmhouse every night, where the dog shared with them his food. A few days ago Anderson had occa sion to go to an old straw-stack some distance from his barn. While at work there he saw a wolf sneak out'of the stack and hurriedly make off across the field. Anderson at ouce made an investigation, and was soon rewarded by hearing the whimpering of baby wolves in a nest in the interior of the stack. While digging them out, using a heavy pitchfork, there was a sudden snarl and a second female wolf came out with a rush. Anderson struck at her with the pitchfork and succeeded in driving the tines through her body. She made a desperate effort to reach the man, but was soon despatched. The farmer then began in earnest the work of digging out the young ones, of which he found eight, there being two nests closo together. The whelps were too young to make much of a fight, and all but one were killed. This one was placed on exhibition. It is attracting much attention, and An derson has already refused an offer ol if2s for it. —New York World. liullan Instrument*. The only instruments known to these tribes were the drum, the rattle, aud a kind of flageolet. The drum and rattlo were used in accompanying the voice, to accentuate the rhythm aud to assist in interpret ing the emotive impulse of the song. Shaking the rattle and beating the drum with clear, sharp strokes served not only to mark the time, but to se cure the co-ordination and unity ot movement of the numerous voices in the choral, or to enforce precision of motion in the dance. The tremolo of the drum or rattle was to express the awe aud trepidation felt when ap proaching the supernatural, or when invoking the aid of the occult powers. The flageolet was a rather rude in strument, having a range limited to eight or tou notes in the treble clef. Owing to the lack of mechanical ac curacy in its manufacture, this range varied with every instrument, as did also the quality and value of the tone relations. There seems to have beeu only oue requirement of the maker— namely, that when the fiagelet was blown with all the six holes stopped there should be strong vibrations in the tone produced. This instrument was used exclusively for solos by the young men of the tribe, and, in spite of the inaccuracies of pitch arising from its imperfect construction, some of the melodies composed for it are not without hints of beauty.—Journal of American Folk Lore. A Very Big Boy. A lady from the country, who re cently had occasion to send to town for a suit of boy's clothes, took the measurements herself. She received the following reply: "Dear Madam: Y'onr favor received, hut we regret to say that we have no clothes Buch as you want, and ve doubt if they can be found outside a museum with a fat boy. Fifty-four inches round the chest, twenty-four round the neck aud sixty round the waist is a little out of our line. Pos sibly you might squeeze the hoy down a little, but this would hardly be ad visable, for, as you say, he is only twelve, and the chances are that he would grow with all you might do. We would advise you to take the youth to SGme wholesale tailoring establishment. A boy with arms sixty three inches long and legs just six feet to an inch is a little beyond the capa bilities of this establishment, though we study to please." The lady has since learned that she nsed the wrong side of the tape measure.—Pearson's Weekly. Superiority of nrltl.h Dlrcli. A woman applied to Mr. Dickinson at the Thames Polico Court for advice about her sou, a boy of thirteen, who on several occasions had stolen money from her. Mr. Dickinson—"Have you a hus band?" Applicant—"Yes." Mr. Dickinson—"Has he punished him?" Applicant—"Ho whacks him some times." Mr. Dickinson—"lt is no good beat ing him with a cane or stick. Buy a good birch rod. You can get one for about threepence. Then get your husband to give him twelve really good strokes with it, and in all prob ability he will never steal any more." —London Daily News. Regretted Limitations. A rural editor, describing a village banquet, probably felt that he had done his duty iu the way of praise when he wrote: The banqnet that awaited the guests iu the supper-room was oue of the fin ebt ever seen iu this place. The table fairly groaned under ite weight of good things, and some of the guests prob groaned after tliey left it, al though the remark of each guest as he or she left the table was, "I wish I could hold more," and no one felt liia limited capacity more keenly than ye editor. —Youth's Companion,