THE HAIR WORN LOW. Vets Jeweled nnd Bended nnd Silken ScniTn Inevitably Follow. The fashion of dressing the hair •well at the back nnd even low on the nape has come In to stay. A couple of lessons at the hairdresser's will serve to teach a woman how to do unaided at least two or three of the new twists, and with this arrangement 4 how to give the head the air of com pact neatness upon which every Amer ican woman insists. The importance of knowing how to comb your hair In ha good rear coil or height Is made iin . pressive by the spring hats. All the shapes are cut, bent nnd trimmed to harmouize with the liair when dressed t, low, aud the woman who says she won't put her lialr down Is grandly disciplined when she finds that her new hat won't sit on so long as her hair is pinned up. A big, three roll, or a big winged eight is the most satisfactory arrange ment the coiffeurs have yet arrived at. For the morning the roll Is unadorned, save for occasional ornamental pins; with afteruoou dress clusters of little corkscrew curls are tucked in behind the ears, to make way in the evening before long Gainsborough ringlets that bang upon the bnre shoulders. When two extremely long curls are •drawn forward or. cither side of the neck they are appropriately called Lady Teazles, aud not infrequently tire hair receives a dash of powder to accentuate the eighteenth century 1 quality of tills style. It was almost Inevitable, with the low arrangement of the lialr and the waterfalls of curls, that the nets of 1800 nnd thereabouts should come back to favor. Women first began to treat them as a joke, but now they have accepted them In earnest, and in visible nets, nets of silk with chenille spots, and nets of beads, are multiply ing wltb mnaziug rapidity. A net, for two sound reasons, Is almost neces sary with the new coiffure. It is re quired to keep the bulky mass of black , hair taught aud neat, and wheu a pau city of natural cheveture brings a quantity of false braids and switches Into requisition, the not assists In hold ing these securely in place. Some women, who do not wear jew eled or chenille nets In the evening have found almost as much comfort In the use of fanciful lialr scarfs. These are made of chiffon, silk mus lin, Liberty tissue or Oriental gauze, twisted with ropes of pearls, or caught 4 to the hair behind with jeweled vf clasps, and then brought forward nnd * the euds fastened just above either temple with begemmed brooches. The effect Is coquettish, nnd the scarf Is always so arranged that it serves as n reinforcement to any superimposed r puffs or braids. Some of the most prominent hair dressers are actively pushing the use of pearl Juliet nets. These are round or diamond shaped. They fit on the erowu of the head, and iu some eases -a point of the net will come forward to the forehead nnd there branch up In the form of pearl butterfly wings. A great mnuy women have looked ask ance at the tiny, three-cornered bead and chenille nets that are to be pinned directly on the top of the head. They are to be worn by day, and their util ity is uot far to seek. Since nil the bulk of the lialr has been drawn down to the back of the head there is literal ly nothing to which the bat crown can be pinned. In order to hold It firm. If, V however, a tiny net Is first made fast to the top of the head and the hat pins then caught through Its meshes, a gale of wind will be required to unseat the pretty piece of millinery or knock It even askew. If one's hat is removed after a breezy walk no unsightly de vice for holding it on then appears, for the little pearl or bead-strung caps are distinctly ornamental and in some cases most becoming.—New York Sun. Troubles of a Congressman's Wife. In Harper's A. Maurice Low, in his paper on Washington Society, tells of the difficulties confronting a newly elected Representative's wife in get ting into "society:" "The rural Congressman's wife, am bitious to be iu society, and who fond ly imagines that election to the House -of Representatives carries with it the , goblen key to unlock all doors, learns her first and bitter lesson," says Mr. 4' Low, "when she discovers that posi ~ tlon means something, but pel-Sons are everything. Such a woman comes to Washington full of her own Import ance, profoundly impressed with the greatness of her husband, fondly be lieving that the wife of the President, the wives of the members of the Cab inet, the wives of Senators, will re ceive her with open arms; that she will be invited to the dinners of which she has read in her local paper; that she will get her name In the newspapers, and her dresses will he described as was that of the Governor's wife at the last charity ball. Alas for her dis illusionment! She learns that while a Congressman may be a very big man In bis district, be Is a very small man 1n Washington until he has estab lislied his right to be regarded as above the average. If lie has money aud tact he may soon attract attention and cross the golden boundary; or If he A has no money, but much ability, he will reach his destination by another route; but if he has neither otic ncr the other, if he is simply an ordiu- member of Congress, a very fair specimen of middle-class, common place intelligence, the social recogni tion for which his wife sighs will never be hers. The wives of Senators from her State will return her call, she may be invited to a tea, even to a dinner at the fag end of the season, hut that will bo the limit of her in sight into society." Your Gai-inent* Must Cling. Whatever you have or whatever you don't have for your spring and sum mer outflt there are certain tilings ol line that must be remembered and carried out. With these you can weal what you please and look well. With out them you will be hopelessly out of style, and no amount of money ot richness of material will redeem you. first, your garments must cling to the figure. No pads 011 the hips and no bustle are permissible. You must look as slim as possible about the hips and as far down as the knees, where your skirt may begin to flare. Skirts must lay on the ground one inch in front, three on the 3idos and six in the back, The only exceptions to this rule are the business and outing skirts, which must be short all around, and the elab orate frock, which may be much longer in the back. Shoulders musl be broad and drooping. The shoulder seams are cut long, and collarettes and other bodice garniture droop far over the sleeves.—Woman's Home Com panion. New Tints of tlie Moment. Red tones are conspicuous in the windows, but comparatively few smart women affect this color, and it is more generally worn by young girls and children. Every effort is made to revive green as a fashionable color, but very little will be worn in clotli and woolen fabrics, although it is ac cepted to some extent for evening gowns. A delicate tint of lettuce green or illy leaf, as It Is also termed, Is too attractive to be overlooked, nnd it is extremely smart In combination with a bright dahlia or parma violet tint. Both the pink and the red coral tones arc fashionable, and a very greenish turquoise Is employed as a relief col oring to violet and mulberry hues.— Washingtou Star. The Art of Retiring* A graceful exit from a drawing room has always been an art. There Is a good old rule iu letter writing about saying what you have to say and stopping when It is done, yet there uro people who always leave the Im portant part of a note for the post script. It Is said that' women are worse than men in this respect, says Woman's Life. When the call is at an end, one who Is not from long habit accustomed to formal visiting should keep in mind the point of leaving, and when she has said the last thing she wishes to say, rise quickly nnd easily nnd shake hands with her hostess, making some pleasant remarks as she does so, and go directly out. Care of tile Complexion. New ideas as to the care of the hands and the care of the complexion will always find some persons waiting to receive them. Those who try every thing from milk baths on are now ad vocating parsley water as a complex lon Improver. A large bunch of pnrs ley is put to soak in one-half pint of rainwater over night. In the morn ing the face is well rubbed with a dry cloth and the parsley water is then applied with a sponge, no further pro cess of drying taking place. To give the parsley water a real trial, It must he thus applied three times daily. To the dainty woman, there is something still left to be desired on the point of cleanliness in all this. Bracelets iu Fashion. Bracelets have eoine in fashion again, as the result of the elbow length sleeve, and many are studded with beautiful jewels. BRCTTX 2L. ROHLKGSJM. The latest stock collars are of light silk aud lace, lined with liexible ma terial, and have the lower frout cud pointed. A new veiling is the "scroll effect" ou a hairline mesh. Between the scrolls there are black dots of silk or ebeuille. Black and white-are among the fa vorite trimmings for spring hats, and some of the latest novelties are white velvet leaves shading to black at the tips. The Increasing use of tiny buttons for ornament, us well as service, has led designers to finish many fancy col lurs with rows of diminutive buttons In silk or metal. A new effect in hat crowns has been termed by some persons a "freak." II Is made of leather tinted to resemble marble, and fastened to the straw brim by a colored ribbon. Lace collars and cuffs, which give a pretty finish to any waist, now come in sets, consisting usually of a high neck collar, a sailor or round shaped collar and wide cuffs to match. Among the newest effects in em broideries are those obtained by silk on sheer materials. These are alt ot the washable variety, and adapted for dressy gowus, separate skirts or waists. A touch of color Is given to blnelt or white evening gowus by fastening to the left shoulder an un'usuqliy large pompom of colored Liberty silk rib bon, with two long side ex tending nearly to tile edgt the skirt. :■ HOUSEHOLD * * ? !; >. * 9 9 9 MATTERS ■: VWW.V.WJWWWWWWW? The Way to Disinfect Rooks. If you have an atomizer half fill it with a forty per cent, solution of for maldehyde. Stand the books upright on the end wide open with the leaves separated as much as possible, and spray thoroughly with formaldehyde. If the binding is very delicate and like ly to be Injured by the moisture pro cure a tight tin box large enough to hold the book and a saucer filled with formaldehyde. Stand the book upright as described and close the box, leaving It for an hour at least. It Is said that one cubic centimetre of formaldehyde to three hundred cubic centimetres of space will thoroughly disinfect any book in fifteen minutes.—Ladies' Home Journal. Correct Dlnlug Table Decoration*. A florist told me the other day that a well-adorned dining table no longer exhibits a great centrepiece of flow ers. Instead, the embroidery doily, which to be up to date is large and square, calls for a tall, slim vase with a few choice roses or some tall stemmed flowers In the centre of the doily. At each corner of the doily goes a lower vase of the same style as the taller, with the same flowers in it. Sometimes the vases are low and hold violets or orchids, hut they must be alike. This florist predicts for spring and early summer table decoration a great profusion of lily of the valley, which Queen Alexandra has chosen as the coronation flower.— Good Housekeeping. Iclcnllzefl Pillows. The newest and most beautiful cush ion covers are made of gathered chif ron. The chiffon Is so drawn as to look like flakes of foam, and very full quadruple flounces are set at the edge. To shape a cushion like a heart is to invest it with a new appearance. Some of the smartest even have wreaths of tiny roses or forget-me nots at the base of the flounces. In the big shops embroidery motifs are sold, made of lace, at a few cents or dollars, according to their value, a dozen. These appliqued upon clear muslin make pretty sofa cushions, while others, of course, can be used for collars aud dainty lingerie, and look both smart and pretty.—New York Commercial Advertiser. To liniu-OVH n Dork Hall. A woman who has long found the narrow hall of her house dark and dif ficult to treat in auy way that made the entrance to the residence attrac tive, has transformed it, to 'its great Improvement, by letting in a mirror from floor to ceiling on one side. This Is opposite the parlor door, nnd the light from that apartment, falling on the mirror, is reflected buck into the hall, to its much better lighting, while the apparent size of the little place Is greatly increased. The mirror is, of course, unframed, nnd is fitted In be tween cornice and baseboard, and fin ished at the sides with a flat mould ing that seems a part of the wood work. The value of this treatment is not realized until it is tried. Often a blank stretch of wall that seems a hopeless shutting in of space may of fer the transforming opportunity. Care must be taken not to overdo the treatment in such away as to create the effect of a hotel corridor or public hall; but judiciously used under the care of a good architect, the plan is to be commended.—Harper's Bazar. . . RECIPES . . Anchovy Toast—The French mode of preparing anchovy toast is as fol lows; Melt an ounce of butter In a pan nnd a tablespoonful of anchovy paste* thin It out a little with hot water! add the juice of a lemon; pour over the toast and serve. A better way of preparing it is to spread a thin layer of the paste over the toast and pour over It the milk prepared as for milk toast. Blackberry Tart-A plain paste made with butter or cream and a little baking powder Is much better for fruit pies than the finest puff paste ever made. Use one-third cup of butter to one nnd one-quarter cups of flour and one-half level teaspoonful of bakin™ powder. Mix with lee water, roll ou"t to fit a perforated tin pie plate and build up the edges slightly. Bake and (ill with fresh blackberries'; sprinkle generously with powdered sugar nnd cover with whipped cream. Turnip -Soup—Peel and slice six white turnips; put them over the fire in two pints of boiling wnter; add one slice of onion; cook until the turnips are tender; rub them through a strainer into the water in which they were boiled; season with salt, pepper celery salt; melt two level tablespoon fuls of butter; add two level table spoonfuls of flour; stir this into the boiling water nnd stir until thickened let cool five minutes, then add one cun ful of milk. Sweet Tomato Pickle—One peck ot green tomatoes and six large onions sliced. Sprinkle with one cupful of salt, and let them stand over night In the morning drain. Add to the to matoes two quarts of water and one of vinegar. Boil fifteen minutes, then drain again and throw the vinegar and water away. Add to the pickle two pounds of light brown sugar, two quarts of vinegar, two tablespoonfuH of clove, one of allspice, two of must ard, two of cinnamon nnd one table spoonful cayenne, or, better siill, one green pepper cut Into inch pieces. Boil fifteen minutes, or until the tomatoes are tender. The advertising man may uot be superstitious, but he believes iu signs. THE OLD-TIME CIRCUS SHOW. These here circuses we see Ain't the sort that used to he- Great big wonderful affairs Keeps us scatterin' our stares 'Long the strung-out row o' ring. Tryin' to see all the things Till our rubbernecks git sore As a bile, an' every pore Kweatin' plum from head to feet From excitement an' the heat, An' our eyes get tangled so Seems they're swappin' places; go Bollin' up an' down the tent Sort o' in bewilderment Tryin' to see it all till they Git right in each other's way! Leave the tent plum certain w. Haven't seen the half, by gee! An' around the town we sneak Lookin' eross-c.ved fer a week! Give us then; ol'-fashioned shows, Seat a a-pilin' up in rows 'Round a single throwed-up ring Where they showed us everything In a bunch, an' wc could set Watchin' 'em an' never fret Thinkin' there was somcthin' we Wasn't goin' to git to see. —Denver Post. Employer—"What are ycu Idling ■ your time nwny for?" Clerk—"l'm not; > it's your time."—Chicago News. She always meets me at the door, My little wife so sweet; I She ahvay3 meets mo at the door, , To make me wipe my feet! —Philadelphia Record. Mother—"You must remember, Em -1 incline, that fine feathers don't make a fine bird." Daughter—"True, mam ma, but they do make awfully pretty hats."—Tit-Bits. The Teacher—"Without mastering multiplication wo could not go any further In arithmetic." One of the Pupils—"Gee! Wouldn't that bo a elnch!"—Puck. Father—"What is the use of my earning money, if you spend it as fast as I make it?" Son—"That's all right, father. I eujoy it Just as much as you do making it."—Erooklyn Life. Blobbs—"I shall have to wear glasses." Slobbs—"Are you troubled with your eyes?" "Blobbs—'"What did you think I was going to wear them for bunions?" Philadelphia "You are indeed my treasure," I gently said to her; She oluencd and said with pleasure: "Then be my treasurer!" —Chicago Daily News. newitt—"l've lost my best friend." Jewett—"Why don't you advertise for it?" HowJtt—"What do you mean?" Jewett—"l thought you said you had lost your pocket book."—The Smart Set. "I suppose you had to study anat omy as a preliminary at your art work." "Hardly. Why, that would be a handicap. My business is to draw fashicn-platc figures."—Chicago Post. Visitor—"You havo a beautiful place here, but doesn't one become very much bored living in the country alone?" Hostesc—"Oil, no! Thank goodness, we havo few callers."—Tit- Eits. Mrs. Ncxdrre—"My daughter, you know, is quite a lover of music." Mrs. Newcom'o Pepprey—"You don't say? Then that constant drumming on the piano iu your house must aunoy her dreadfully."—Philadelphia Press. "Yes," said the head of the firm, "Miss Addle is a good bookkeeper, ' but she makes some queer mistakes." "What, for instance?" asked the sileut partner. "Well, she enters our mes senger boy's wages under the bead of 'running expenses.' " Philadelphia Press. "This," said the fond father to the , dematologieal expert, "seems to be a , pretty big bill for the treatment yoS ' havo given my daughter." "It was a difficult treatment," explained the ■ skin doctor. "You sec, we had to re . move all the cuticle from her cheeks . and graft a new epidermis upon them." "Well," said the father, reach ing for nis check-hook, "I don't know ( which cue of us you skiuuod the [ most."—Baltimore Amerieau. The Lincoln National Mutoutn, The Lincoln Museum Is now domi- I ciled in the house in which Abraham Lincoln died, No. 510 Tenth street. Northwest, between E and F streets, j directly opposite the building which was Ford's Theatre, where he was shot a few minutes past 10 on the night j of April 14, 1805. Approaching this house from F street, one of the prin cipal thoroughfares of Washington, we ; see on the north side of the high steps | fastened to the iron railing, a sign, which informs us that "Abraham Lin coln died in tbis house, tweuty-two , minutes past 7a. in., April 15, 1565." The house is a modest three-story and ' basement brick edifice, and was owned and occupied by William Peterson at , the time of the tragedy, and his family then conducted a lodging house here. ' It was one of his lodgers who, upon hearing the commotion iu the street , after the shooting had occurred nnd the assassin had escaped, rushed to the door and seeing the stricken Pres ident being brought across the street, [ directed the carriers to bring him into , the house of which he was an oeeu | pant.—Dr. Thomas Culver, In the Wom- I I an's Home Companion. 1 A Mini IVlio Kiion-s. ' Douglas, the shoe man, who spends 1 more than SIOO,OOO a year for newspaper advertising, makes this affirmation: ] "Any man who lias an article of merit | or any man who lias a business in a j good location who will advertise and keep on advertising is bound to more lhan get his money hack and to be ? come successful and wealthy."—Phil , adelphia Record. SOME HARDENED CR OKS TRICKS BY WHICH THEY TRY TO HOODWINK THE POLICE. One Criminal Who Gave Up Second-Story Bobberies in Order to Receive Stolen Goods— Another Who Led a Respect* able Life in Order to TUBS Bad Checks* "It's pretty hard for a lag to take a brace, and not many of them do it, but that's not the fault of the police," remarked an old-time Headquarters man who used to be one of the Byrnes staff. "The police are glad to see a crook take a hitch to the right side and stay so, but they've found out from long experience that there are few of them who really do that thing. "When n man hus got hold of bun dles of easy money a few times, with out doing a lick for it, he isn't much good any more. The recollection of It always stays with him. The clev erer they are the more liable they are to stay with their favorite game. "Whenever I hear of a finished and graduated lag giving it out that it's him for a merry and a little flat and a trip with tlie family every Sunday morning to the little church around the corner, I hope it's true, but it's been true in so few cases since I've been paddling around with a badge stowed away beneath my outer clothes that I'm a little bit inclined to rubber to see if the hoy Isn't working up his little settle-down for the purpose of giving Mulberry street the cayenne square between the eyes. "One of them, an old-time second story man who'd done bits in all the big mills of the country, came pretty near throwing me with a spin like that about fourteen years ago. I'd tagged him a couple of times and get him, and when he came back witli his hair short the .ast time lie looked me up and handed me one something like this: " 'lt's me to Join the whlties. I'm through. I'm through right. I've made my last climb. You know how long it's nad me down. I Just thought I'd come over and tell you, and tell the Chief, so's you'd know. I'm going to get a Job In Brooklyn, nnd if you ever hear of me being with the flash push again, nail me for a forty-specker and I'll thank you.' "Well, there was something in the sort o' down way this old lag had about him when he pushed this one over to mo that it got me just a leetle bit around the neck, for a fact. I took him in to the Chief. "Well, you could never tell what the Chief thought, one way or the other, and when the old-timer passed him the same ripple I had no means of knowing whether it had stuck or not. The Chief simply told the old lag to drop in ouce in a while. Just for so ciability's sake, and the promise was made, aifd I dug into the kick nml handed the vet a few loose ones that were laying around, and wished him luck. "A month later, in a neat suit of black clothes, this old second-story man came 'round, paid me back those few dollars, and invited me to visit bis lodgings in Brooklyn. He said that be bad a Job as truckman for a big warehouse company—which I afterward found out to be true—and that bis niece wus keeping bouse for bim. "The next time I was in Brooklyn In the evening I dropped in upon the old lag, and you never saw such a cute ■little flat, nor such a nice, womanly like person—bis niece, as be intro duced lier—presiding over it, in your born minutes. That clinched me. I had a disli of tea and went away with a teencliy lump in my throat, aud when I saw the Chief and all the rest of the crowd the plugging I did for that old-timer was something big ger iu that liue than I've done before or since. "Well, that'll be about all of the soft notes up around the E string, with (lie mute on. Two mouths later a stool pigeon gave me the whisper that there was a pretty-sizeable jewelry 'fence' running over in Brooklyn in a certain district. "The tip I passed on to the Brooklyn office without any suspicion of what was going to happen. What happened was that the Brooklyn office made a swoop upon the fence, and the swag manager thereof was no less a smooth smoke than the old lag who had been the occasion of giving me the mel lows for the first time in a good many years. "lie had passed up the second-story game, all right, but he had rigged up his fence with a wide business, and his 'niece' was about as emery-papered a piece of English female crookdom as ever had her hair clipped short or wore a burlap mother hubbard on prison dress parade. "The old devil had stuck to his teamster job for the purpose of keep ing up his blind, and he had asked me to scatter the word around among the police crowd that he was honestly and truly on the level. I could see the almost imperceptible slow grin under the Chief's mustache when it all came out, and the things I did for many a moon after that in the way of tossing pebbles at my fore head couldn't be set down in a week. "There was a check-kiter in this town once—he's been picking oakum and trending the mill in the English Portland for many a long year now —who did a reform stunt with the copper on and with such science that it took the otlice two years even to suspect him. "When he came back from up the river he made the poor mouth that he wanted to be let alone—which wasn't" necessary—and got a job in a New York insurance office as a clerk. He [ married a nice girl, and fixed up a cosey Utile Harlem plaut, and made liis regular little personal report on the quiet at the oftiee at the regular intervals, and got into the ehurcb-go iug habit, and it began to look to a lot of us tvlio were next to his record that he was going to do a lot of fool ing up of a lot of people. "But, as I say, he was laying plugged cheeks down all the time and ac cumulating the coin as a getaway stake, for he was an Englishman and had the idea of making a final slow killing over here and then re turning to the old country to give all hands on this side the quiet hoot. "He operated for those two years on an extonsve and almighty skilful manner, putting them over in widely separated communities, hiking as far as Philadelphia to pick up a few buu dreds, and when he was finally got dead to rights he had an egg so near ¥30,000 laid away in a number of Har lem banks that there wasn't any fun in it. "He hadn't had a single high step or blowout out of the tricks he had turned, and if ever you saw a savage man when he mentioned this fact up on coming out of the sweat-box, he was the individual. "Nine years was the bit he got out of his little lead-a-new-life stunt, and when he got out he had so much less hair and nerve that he went to Eng land, where they soak 'cm hard for swiping a whisk-broom or stepping on a cockroach's foot, and they swung on him with such force for a mere little matter of fifty pound that he's walking the endless roller up to the present moment."—New York Sun. The Bride Wean lted. Red is the nuptial color in China. The coolies that carry the bride in her litter are dressed In red, and they bear a dwarf orange tree loaded with fruit and coin. The bride's compart ments are finished in red trimmings, presents are carried on red trays, the banners borne in the procession are originally crimson, which are bright ened by the rosy glow of the lan terns. The canopy itself is decorated according to the wealth and the taste of the bride's family. A poor woman is carried to her wedding feast in a plain chair painted red. If the family has wealth or rank the palanquin is very ornate, decorated with dragon heads. The Chinese skill in working silk or gold cord is displayed in an artistic manner. When the bride ap pears she wears a red veil, nnd the letters to her ancestors, whose bless ing is invoked, are written on red paper. The bride generally wears a crown adorned with tinsel and mock jewels—an idea which is much more prevalent in Sweden.—Woman's Home Companion. London Christina. The movement for Sunday closing of public houses in England is assum ing a business-like aspect. One of the chief obstacles has been the compara tive indifference of members of the An glican Church to the reform. This should now be greatly modified by the warm ndvocacy of mauy of the leading bishops, as well as of the Archbishop of Canterbury. The working classes are erroneously supposed to be hostile to the move ment. About a million householders have already been canvassed, the re sult showing a majority of seven to one iu favor of Sunday closing. Even more striking is the result of a canvass of fifty-six workshops, containing over 11,000 men. Of these, 10,000 declared themselves in favor of Sunday closing, with 1190 against and 514 neutral. A majority even of publicans have de clared against the present custom.— London Christian. Oldest Paper In the World. It is generally believed that the Times, of London, and the Gazette de France, of Paris, are the oldest papers in existence, but this appears to be a mistake. The honor belongs to the Chinese, who possess a journal started nearly 1000 years ago. Its name Is the King-Pah. It was founded, says a learned bibliopholist, in the year 011 of the Christian era. In ISO 4 it underwent another trans formation, and appeared daily. It costs a half penny and issues three editions. The morning edition, printed on yellow paper, is devoted to com merce; the noon edition, printed on white paper, contains official acts and miscellaneous news; while the evening edition, printed on red paper, is taken up with political information and lead ing articles. It is edited by six mem bers of the Academy of Science, and the total sale of three editions is 14,- 000 copies. Tile Northern Spur of Mlllllesnta: "If England in 1782 had stood upon the motto, 'What we have we'll hold,' there would be now no Northwest An gle. But that is another story." Iu these words Mr. Otto J. Klotz, of Ot tawa. concluded a paper read at the Ontario Land Surveyors' convention dealing with the Northwest Angle, Lake of the Woods. This is a strip of territory adjacent to the Shoal Lake gold fields, which naturally would be long to Manitoba or Ontario, but a treaty between Great Britain and the United States made it a part of what is now Minnesota, although it is en tirely separated by water from the latter State. Mr. Ivlotz in an interest ing manner traced the history of tlia dispute, and showed that the award, which originally was even less fair to Canada, and which was afterward compromised, was the result of defec tive maps.-Toronto (Out.) Globe. Ireland lias the highest average number of children per family, 5.20, while France has the lowest, 3.03.