MUM IRIBUNE. K£T.-\ Sv 1.1 t BSB. PUBLISHED EVEItV MONDAY. WEDNESDAY AND VRIDAY, BY THE IRILUNE PRINTING COMPANY, LimiieJ OFFICE; MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SI'IISCIUI'MON HATES FREELAND.— ITioTmmJNE Is ilullverod bj carriers to subscribers iu Froolaadattho rata of i'-fi, couts per mouth, paj-abl l every two months, or slia year, payable iu advance The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct form tba carriers or from tho < illoe. Complaints of trrvvular or tardy delivery service will re ceive prompt attention. BY MAIL —The TUIBUNE is sent to out-of. town subscribers for sl.s'a year, payable in advance; pro rata terms for shorter peril ds. Tbu date when tho subscription expires is on the address label of each paper. Prompt re newels must be made at the ex piratioo, other wise the subscription will be discontinued. Entered at the Postofllce at Freoland. Pa ts Second-Class Matter, Make all money orderi s, cheeks, el \,p iy Ml to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited Europeans are learning that Ameri cans are visiting them tor something besides pleasure. An lowa man ate a bowl of yeast to ■win a bet, and Is reported to be ull puffed up over bis success. At present France Is far and away ahead of the rest of the world in tho manufacture and use of electric veh icles. A California community recently lynched at one seance five men accused of horse stealing. This roads like the good old dime-novel days. In most Northern States the rush Is from country to town. In the South ern States the country population has increased sixty-live per cent.; cities, thirty-live per cent.. In ten years. A wireless telegraph station Is to he established on the Nantucket lightship and another on the nearest point of land. In this way It is expected that vessels hound for New York City may be reported at least twelve hours earl ier than they can be reported now from Sandy nook light. All over the country, in every State and Territory, the terrors of the law should be made more formidable to the kidnapers. The stealers of children and those who go no further than to threaten parents with the loss of son f ■ daughter should expect no mercy. Their punishment should be swift and exemplary. It is well, when somebody chatters about the successful business men who never went to college, to ask the chatterer what those men are now doing with their own sons. Do they j send the hoys into the shop or factory j or counting house at the age of ten or ■twelve, or do they keep them in school, and later in college, till they are well grown up? Hero's another weapon that w:ll likely serve to deter other nations from going to war. It is a revolver re sembling in shape a small earbire. It was invented by a Swiss army offi cer, and will soon be issu d to tho troops of that country. The weapon has a bore of 7.05 mln., and fires forty eight shots in twenty-eight seconds, which are warranted to kill at 2000 yards. New England people say that the rage for antique furniture which has been rampant during tho past ten years seems now to be dying out and people are beginning to be willing to look at furniture of modern convenient | styles. But the supply of genuine old I furniture possible to be obtained by I purchase from descendants of the early settlers must have been pretty Veil exhausted. Now Professor Pickering has discov ered, or thinks ho has, that there ie snow on the moon. That writer of en tertaining fiction, Mr. H. G. Wells, long ago assured us of this, and no one who has read his story of the Falling Angel will doubt him to bo a gentle man of veracity. Our romaneists In variably beat our slower science. Jules Verne knew all about submarine boat building long before the Holland's first plans. As to snow on the moon, there is no reason why there should not lie some; it is far easier to believe than green cheese. A curious incident of the recent floods in Calcutta was the stopping Of a tram In Dalhousie square, the Very heart of the city, by a large flsli. which was swimming in the Street and got caught in the wheel. There is only one way to get ready for immortality, ami that is to love this life, and five it as bravely and cheer fully and faithfully as we can —Henry Vaii Uke- A HUNDRED YEARS AGO. Wheie are all the birds that sang A hundred years ago? The flowers that all in beauty sprang A hundred years ago? The lips that smiled, the eyes that wild In flashes shone soft eyes .upon, Wiiere, where, oil, where are lips and eyes, The maidens' smiles, the lovers' sighs, That lived so long ago? Who peopled all the city streets A hundred years ago? Who filled the church with faces meek A hundred years ago? The sneering tale of sister frail. The plot that worked a brother's hurt, Where, where, oh, where are plots and sneers, The poor man's hopes, the rich man's fears That lived so long ago? Where arc the graves where dead men slept A hundred years ago? And who, when they were living, wept, A hundred years ago? Bv other men that know not them Their lands are tilled, their graves are filled, Yet nature then was just as gay, And bright the snn shone as to-day, A hundred years ago. pied For Another's Crime f £ - Tale fa Man lVlio Disbelieves £ jjjj Circumstantial Evidence. <£ | —r- HEY were talking iu tho hotel I office ntul the conversation [ turned into a discussion of rtT the value of circumstantial evidence. The sporting man couldn't see how on the evidence given against a dentist in a famous case then on trial, any sane person could have voted I for Ills acquittal of the murder, and said strong things about what he would have done to the jurymen who differed with him had be been in the Jury room nt the recent trial. Most of the' others were inclined to agree with him. "Gentlemen," said tho drummer from the South, who had been shift ing uneasily in ills eliair during these remarks without having had a chance to break into the discussion, "I should have agreed with you about six months ago, in fact, before my last trip South-, but now, should I ever have the power, never would I con demn any human being to death on circumstantial evidence alone." There seemed to be a story coming and tho other men waited. "On my last trip," said the drum mer, "I passed through the western part of Kentucky and there I heard this story, which forever lias destroyed my faith in uncorroborated circum stantial evidence. It was down In Barren County. I was struck by tlie appearance of a flue old mansion. They told me down there that it had belonged to a wealthy and aristocrat ic family named Hamilton, now ex tinct, and then I heard of the crime which for years put the Uamiltons under a cloud of disgrace. "Somewhere about 1820, when the family held their heads as high as ' any folk In Western Kentucky, John Hamilton, the young bond of the house, took to Louisiana n drove of mules for the Southern market. In New Orleans he was stricken with yellow fever and lay for weeks nt the point of death. At the hospital in which lie was confined was a certain Dr. Sanderson. The doctor took a fancy to young Hamilton and pulled j him through tho fever, j "Hamilton on his part seemed to take an equal liking to Sanderson. They were thrown much together and a warm friendship sprang up be tween them. Sanderson had money and when the time came for Hamilton to leave tho hospital, the Kcntucklnn Invited his friend to return with him and try a venture iu tho slave market in Kentucky. Sanderson was only too willing. He resigned Ids post in the hospital and the two men started out. together on horseback through the then almost untravelcd wilderness be tween Louisiana and the Blue Grass State. "They arrived safely at the Hamil ton homestead and Sanderson was hospitably entertained for two weeks. He had brought with him 810,000 for investment in slave dealing, and he was anxious to go on further to a part of Kentucky where it could lie readily invested. The 810,000 was in bonds of the Louisiana State Bank. One summer morning tho doctor took his departure for the slave market at j Glasgow, and young Hamilton rode | with him for a milq or two to get lihu , on his way and wish him good luck. I "Hamilton returned iu an hour or two and went about ids work. Sev eral days passed and nothing was heard of the doctor. Then one morn ing, the horse on which lie had ridden away from the Hamilton homestead was found riderless in the road a few miles outside of Glasgow. The sad dle was stained with blond. In the grass by tho roadside not far away there was picked up a brass barrelled flint-lock pistol. It was recognized as belonging to Hamilton. The lock was broken and a fragment of it was missing. | "Further search revealed in a shal -1! low hole only about ,';o(> feet from where the pistol was found a decaying , body which was readily Identified as Dr. Sanderson's. The 810,000 worth of bomls which lie had carried away 1 with him were missing, i "Now all this was discovered before Hamilton was informed thnt his friend was dead. As soon as the body was found, he was placed under arrest ac cused of the murder. One of the first things lie did was to produce from the lining of his hat the SIO,OOO worth of Louisiana State bonds which Dr. Sanderson had brought to Kentucky. He did so, protesting, that the doctor had given them to him in exchange for £ cash and that he was innocent of the murder, but nobody believed him. y I "Then a pair of blood-stained over alls that bad boon worn by IXamilton wore found In n corn crib and the evi dence seemed complete. The young man was placed on trial at the next term of court. Till then he had had the best of reputation, and Ills friends had been legion. He hadn't many friends left when he went on trial. One of the ablest lawyers of the Ken tucky ba of that dny defended him, but It was a hopeless case. "Hamilton took the stand on his own behalf add he was an excellent wit ness. according to the stories they've handed down In Kentucky. He swore that he had accompanied Dr. Sander son o mile or two on his way. had given bint the pistol because the doc tor ltafl none and also had persuaded Sanderson to exchange his bonds for United States currency because he thought the doctor might have difficul ty In Wishing the bonds. He had bid den Sanderson God-speed at last, he said, and had left him riding away toward Glasgow. "A negro was ready to testify that he had stained the overalls with blood himself, having stolen them from ids master, to wear to a party. But he was a. slave and his testimony was Inadmissible. Few of those who heard It regarded Hamilton's story as any thing but a cleverly concocted tale to account for circumstances so clearly a gal nit him. The jury certainly did not believe it, and as X thought before hearleg of the outcome I would have done Us those jurymen did. "la spite of the many efforts to save him Hamilton was adjudged guilty. He This condemned to deatli and exe cuted, protesting his innocence even on the scaffold. Only one person be lleVefj in the probability of the man's story being true. He was the Judge. " '1 believe John Hnmiltou was in nocent of the murder of Dr. Sander son,' they say he told Hamilton's fried Is, after the execution. 'But the very winds of heaven blew against me in tint trial.' ''AHtl now comes the most astonish ing part of the story. Many years af ter Hamilton's execution, there died In Western Kentucky an old half witted man named King. On his deathbed his mind seemed to grow clear and he sent for witnesses and told fliem what he said was the true story of the murder of Dr. Sander son. "Ore day while wandering as a lad in tiir woods near the road to Glas gow. lie saw a stranger riding past alone A minute later the Sheriff of Barren County, the man who after ward found Hamilton's broken pistol on the road, who was instrumental tn iindiP-g Sanderson's body and who was Hamilton's bitterest prosecutor in the proceedings that followed, appeared from the opposite direction. The Sheriff rode past the stranger, turned and rode up to him, wrenched the pistol from ills saddle and dealt him a blow that knocked him from his horse. "Tin- dying man who told this swore that the Sheriff knelt beside the body and searched it. Then, seeing the lad watching him from a little distance, ho called him and made him help car ry the body to the sand hole where it was afterward found. They covered it with leaves anil then the Sheriff, after threatening the lad with instant death, should he ever tell what he had seen, remounted and rode away. Such was his fear of the murderer, the old man said, that he had kept the secret, though keeping it had driven him half crazy. "One Caspar D. Craddock had been Sheriff of Barren County when the crime was committed, lie lived for years afterward In a distaift part of the State, but a short time before the old man's tale was told he had dis appeared. Investigation showed that not long after Hamilton's execution, Craddock had deposited nearly SIO,OOO in United States currency in a bank in that part of Kentucky to which he moved, and from his subsequent life 110 one who knew him doubted for a moment that lie was really the mur derer of Dr. Sanderson. "In his new home the ex-Sheriff gave himself up to a life of crime and violence. The citizens who had lived near him finally warned him to leave the community if he valued his life, and a few days later he disappeared. He was recognized long afterward in Cuba, and the desperate ruse by which lie got away from Kentucky was then revealed. They say it was character istic of the man. "One night soon after he had been warned to leave Kentucky, Craddock was called from his home by a strang er. The next day, in a hog pen a few yards from the house, was found a body clad in the remains of Crad dock's clothes, but so gnawed and mu tilated by the hogs that it was unrec ognizable. Every mark by which Craddock might have been recognized wan obliterated, but from the clothes the body was supposed undoubtedly to be ('ruddock's, though 1 believe his neighbors wondered how he could liaye fallen into tlie hog pen. "It was realized when news came that Cratldoek was alive ill Cuba that lie had either murdered his caller and alter exchanging clothes had thrown liis body into the pen, knowing what the result would be, or that lie had disinterred and thrown into the pen some in v. Iy buried body for the pur pose of concealing his flight. "There, gentlemen," concluded the drummer from the South. "This is no fairy tale. It is well known in West ern Kentucky and when I henrd it from the lips of men whose fathers well knew Hamilton and the circum stances attending ills trial. I resolved never again to believe uncorroborated circumstantial evidence."—New York Sun. The death of an ostrich in the New York Zoo of consumption disposes of the theory that an ostrich can con sume anything with safety. THE KING OF ITALY'S DISCOVERIES Why Victor Emmanuel Is Unpopulm With lIU OWil Servants. There Is an element of the unex pected about King Victor Emmanuel which Is beginning to render him noi oso (a bore) to certain classes of his subjects. I suppose all the world over civil service clerks are more assidlous than any others In their efforts to ren der their positions sinecures, but in Italy they reach the acme of perfec tion in this respect. The other morn ing Signor Prluetti, Minister of For eign Affairs, went, as usual, to the Quirlual for the royal signature to va rious documents, which the King signed without comment until he ar rived at one for the augmentation of the staff of the Foreign Office. "This," he said to the surprise of the Minister, "you may leave; I desire to look into it," and there the matter ended for the moment. The next morning His Majesty went out alone and on foot, arriving at the Foreign Office about 9 o'clock, and be gan a tour of discovery, we may call it, in search of some one to speak to. Jl last in a small room toward the roof he came upon a lone man busily engaged In—rolling a cigarette. "Ah I" said the King, "you are already at your work; pray what are the regular morning hours in this office?" "From 8 to 12," stammered the unhappy man, wishing his bad luck had not led him so early out of bed. "And what hour, may I ask, can I hope to see your cata logues?" "About 11," the embarrassed clerk replied, too confused not to tell the truth. "Oh! well, go on with your smoke, and tell your chief of my vls't when he comes," which of course was done, causing dismay to reign supreme in the breasts of the ",00 odd clerks thus caught napping. Meanwhile the Minister was called and dryly told that instead of increasing the staff of the office it might be Just as well to see that those already there did their duty. —Borne Correspondc-ncb of tho Fall Mall Gazette. WISE WORDS. Gratitude is the music of the heart. Suspicion is the poison of true friend ship. Watch lest prosperity destroy gener osity. Blame-all and praise-all are two blockheads. To know how to suggest is the great art of teaching. ne that waits upon fortune is never sure of a dinner. It Is more easy to be wise for others than for ourselves. Frugality is a fair fortune, and hab its of industry a good estate. Tho feeling of distrust is always the last which a great mind acquires. A learned blockhead is a greater blockhead than nu ignorant one. The genius, wit and spirit of a na tion are discovered in its proverbs. Flcasure is the flower that fades; remembrance is the lasting perfume. The certain way to be cheated Is to fancy one's self more cunning than others. One man who does things is worth a hundred who talk about the things they are going to do. Debt is a skeleton the bones of which rattle us often In a palace as In a .hovel. Indeed, ofteuer, since credit is not given to the very poor. New Fruit From Jupun. A new fruit was placed on exhibition In the pomologieal display in the Hor ticultural Building. It is the loquot, a distinct species of fruit that grows in Japan. The loquot is unknown here, but the samples shown have an appearance that promises much In the way of popularity. Some patriotic loul in the lower reaches on California has gone into the work of developing the loquot, anil these specimens arc probably the first ever seen in this part of tlie world. They look like u May apple and they taste like a nec tarine. The loquot grows on trees of the nppearance of a peach tree. It is yel low and juicy and lias a smooth skin. There are two enormous seeds as big as small chestnuts. In the natural state the loquot is all seeds, with u thin layer of wrinkled and drawn skin. They come into bloom in Novembel and. are ripe and ready for market in February and March. The fact that they are ripe so early is the real ex cuse for their cultivation, as peaches and apples are much better. There aTe several varieties, this one being the advance. They grow In enormous clusters, thick as grapes, and the tree is borne to the ground by the weight of them.—Buffalo Express. Tlio Old L.tuly and Her Frog. There is the well-known medical story of tho old lady who Imagined that she had a frog in her stomach. Her doctor, after vainly trying to per suade her that it was only imagina tion, considered a little deception justi fiable to prevent this idea becoming fixed In her mind. Having adminis tered an emetic, lie managed to adroit ly introduce a frog into the basin, as if it laid Just arrived from the old lady's stomach. The patient's Joy was great, as there was proof positive that she had been right ail along as to the cause of her illness. Her joy was soon overclouded, as the idea struck her that, although there wits the old frog, there might be little frogs left behind. The doctor, however, was equal to this sudden emergency, for on a rapid ex amination of the frog be immediately tssured tlie patient that her fears were groundless, as her late guest was a jentleman frog.—Notes and Queries. When a soda water fountain blows ap it becomes a fizzlcal wreck. EVIL OF EATING ALONE TALK AND COMPANIONSHIP ARE ES SENTIAL TO PROPER DIGESTION. Prematura Dyspepsia Is One of tho Most Trying Features of Unmarried Life— Physically and Intellectually AVo I la. prove AVlth Companionship* At a time like the present, tvlien tho marrying age ot the average man of the middle classes Is being more and more postponed, the physical Ills of bnchelordom come Increasingly under the notice of the medical man. It Is not good for man or woman to live alone. Indeed, it has been well said that for solitude to be successful a man must be either angel or devil. This refers, perhaps, mainly to the moral aspects of isolation, and with these we have now no concern. There arc certain physical ills, how ever, which are not the least among the disadvantages of loneliness. Of these there is mnny a clerk in London, many a young barrister, rising, per haps, but not yet far enough risen, many a business man or journalist who will say that one of the most trying features of his unmarried llfo is to have to eat alone. And a prema ture dyspepsia is the only thing that ever takes him to his medical man. There nre some few happily disposed individuals who enn dine alone and not eat too fast, nor too much nor too little. With the majority it Is differ ent. The average man puts his novel pr his paper before him and thinks that he will lengthen out the meal with due deliberation with reading a little with, and more between, the courses. He will just employ his mind enough to help, and too little to Interfere with digestion. In fact, he will provide that gentle mental ac companiment which with happier peo ple conversation gives to a meal. This is your solitary's excellent Idea. In reality he becomes engrossed In what ho is reading till suddenly find ing bis chop cold ho demolishes it in a few mouthfuls; or else he finds that he Is hungry and paying no attention to tho book, which he flings aside, he rushes through his food as fast as possible, to plunge Into his nrmclialr and literature nfterward. In either case the lonely man must digest at a disadvantage. For due and easy nu trition food should be slowly taken and the mind should not he Intensely exercised during the process. Every one knows that violent bodily exercise is bad just after n meal, and mental exertion is equally so. Wise people do not even argue dur ing or just after dinner, and observa tion of after-dinner speeches will con duce any one that most speakers neith er endure themselves nor excite in their hearers any severe intellectual effort. In fact, the experience of countless generations, from the red Indian of the woods to the white-shirted diners of a modern party, has perpetuated the lesson that a man should not eat alone, nor think much at tills time, but should talk and be talked to while he feeds. Most people do not think much when tliey talk, and talking is a natural accompaniment of eating and drinking. What docs it fare with the many solitary women of to-day? No better, we kuow, than with the men, but dif ferently. Alone or not a man may gen erally be trusted at any rate to take food enough. (We suppose, of course, that he can get it.) With a woman it is different. She is more emotional, more imaginative, and less inclined to realize the gross necessities of exist ence. Therefore, the woman doomed to dine alone as often as not does not dine at all. She gets dyspepsia be cause her digestion lias not sufficient practice, a man gets it because his functions practice it too often in the wrong way. Worst of all, perhaps, is the case of the solitary cook. In the myriads of small llats in London there are thous ands of women "doing" for their soli tary masters or mistresses. These women, whose main occupation is to prepare food for others, find it impos sible to enjoy, or even to tnke, food themselves. As confectioners nre said to give their apprentices a free run of the stock of tho snop for the first few days, knowing that it will effectu ally cure appetite afterward, so tho women who are always occupied with buying and preparing food grow un able to use it for themselves. These people suffer from dyspepsia, which is cured if somebody else manages their kitchen for a week, allowing tlieni to take meals without preparing them. It needs no moralist to declare the evils of solitariness. Mr.u and woman is a gregarious animal. Physically and Intellectually we Improve with com panionship. Certainly It is not good to eat r.nd to drink alone. It is a sad fact of our big cities that they hold hundreds of men and women who in Hie day are too busy and at night too lonely to feed with profit, much less with any pleasure.—The Lancet. Not a New Fabric. Possibly your idea of ehallle, ore of our fashionable spring fabrics, is that it is a very new idea. On the con trary, it dates back seventy-five years, and from tho very beginning its flue quality and beautiful designs gave it wide vogue. Silk and worsted both are used in Its composition.—Philadel phia ltecord. Ancient Needlcg. Needles when first invented were such clumsy affairs the beautiful and fine work the women of olden times used to do with them seems little short of a miracle. Ivory, bone or metal, In the latter case with a loop instead of a head, were first used in their com position. MAKING A MAN. Hurry the baby as fast as you can, Hurry him, worry him, make him a man. Off with his baby clothes, get him in pants. Feed him on brain-foous and make him advance. Hustle him, soon as he's able to walk, Into a grammar school; cram him wits tarn. Fill his poor head full of figures and facts, Keep on a-jamming them in till it cracks. Once boys grew up at a rational rate, Now we develop a man while you wait. Kush him through college, compel him ts grab Of every know subject, a dip and a dab. Get him in business and after the cash. All by the time he can grow a moustache. Let him forget he was ever a boy, Make gold his god and its jingle his joy. Keep aim a-hustliug and clear out ol breath, Until lie wins—nervous prostration and death. —Nixon Waterman, in C. E. World. i HUMOR OK THE DAY. The Maid—"Do you think kissing is bail for one, doctor?" The Doctor— "Well, I should say It was better for two."—Yonkers Statesman. Belle—"Do you tliiuk the world is growing better?" Flora —"I thought so, my dear, until I married George to reform him."—The Smart Set. Her Mother —"How are his table manners?" Ethel "His table man ners are all right, but his telephone mauners are simply awful."—Judge. Daughter—"But he Is so full of ab surd ideals." Mother—"Never mind that, dear. Your father was just the i same before I married him."—Tit-Bits. He ordered a saddle of mutton, Tho waiter brought it, of course; Said he, after trying to carve it, " 'Tis the saddle, no doubt, of a horse." —Chicago News. The Prime Minister "Then Your Majesty likes eomle opera?" The C'zar —"Very much! A comic opera is about the only thing in which I don't look for a plot."—Puck. "I can easily see the reason why a > , badly told story seldom gets much ™ countenance." "And what is the rea son?" "They're a sort of poor rela tion."—Philadelphia Times. The wedding ring that the heiress gets Oft serves a special plan. 'Tis just a circlet that squares the debts Of some poor nobleman. —Philadelphia Record. Mrs. Fljjit—"Why doesn't Mr. Sinith ers come to our house any more?" Mr. Fljjit—'"l can't imagine; I'm sure I al ways tried to entertain him by tiie smart tilings our baby does, too."— Ohio State Journal. Philanthropist—"What's the matter, little boy? What are you crying about?" Little Boy—"The fellers on the street have formed a trust and I ain't in it. A feller can't play baseball or shinny all by hisself, cau he?"—Bos tern Transcript. "What kind of a cover is this on your umbrella?" said the inquisitive friend. "Well," answered the unblush ing person, "judging by the way it came into my possession and the way it will probably depart, I should call it '~y I a changeable silk."—Chicago News. .! Customer—"And Is this chair really an antique piece of furniture?" Deal er—"Antique, maduml There's no doubt about that. Why. it was so worm-eaten when I bought it that I had to have a new hack and a new seat and three new legs made l'or it."—Tit- Bits. "I haven't much use for BlllhersJey," said tho proud papa. "Why?" asked the proud mamma. "I listened to him for au hour to-duy while he told me about what his baby bad said, or tried to say, and Just as I was about to tell him about ours be left me, sayiug he had to catch a train." Baltimore American. lloxers an 1*11! Stlrkerfl. The Boxers nre still causing consid erable anxiety In some parte of Cliiua. Pictorial Boxer placards are beiug sold at mnuy of the markets. One is a sheet fourteen by twenty-four inches u in size, portraying !u red, yellow and ' green the conquests of the Boxers over the foreigners. It is entitled "The ltampage of tho Five Foreign (Powers) in China." The central fig ure is a foreign house of Impossible architecture, which is being set on P fire by flames from the finger-tips of young girls labeled "Bright Bed Lan terns." On the other side of the doomed structure Is a sunke or dragon called "Fire God." Below is the "Golden Bell," under which the Box- j ers are crawling to secure Invisibility, and ut the bottom five uufortuunte j foreigners are beiug done to death with pike and sword. This sort of thing has often a most uufortuunte effect upon the average uneducated t China man.—Westminster Gazette. Skyscrapers In Ancient Times. The idea prevails that "skyscrapers" nre of modern American origin, but Professor Laneiaui declares that in ft ' aucient Rome, as early as the time of Augustus, buildiugs ten or twelve stories high were common. Later they are believed to have been much high er, rivaling our most modern apart ment buildings ill size and height. It is well known that at Constantinople the Emperor Constantino found his view of the water cut off by the sky scrapers erected between his palace and the water front, though lie had placed his palace on high ground.— Baltimore Sun. Sncreil Lily's Atlas. Deception has even reached the dis ciples of Flora. There lias lately been Introduced Into the market a bulb called "The sacred lily of the Nile." The name Is Insufficiently catching to fascinate lovers of flowers, and a friend of mine added the new flower to his conservatory. Time passed, and up came the plaut, but when the "sa cred lily of the Nile" appeared, he i found only an old but still agreeable j friend in the homely narcissus.—East j Anglian Times. '