A MATTER OF DOUBT, 1 love to read of daring deeds. Of clash and clamoring of war; " To learn of one who bravely bleeds. Defending what he's fighting for, But Sonth America is much Too mingled for my mind to hitch'— 1 The tangle they are in is such , I don't know which is fighting which, I They're skipping out with treasuries, And blowing public buildings down, 'And every city quakes and sees Some doughty leader's fighting frown. The cable brings the thrilling news Of men who die in some last ditch- To grasp it must my mind refuse— I don't know which is fighting which. The clang of swords, the blustered boast. Are ringing now both night and day; The troops are battling on the coast; By sea and land they run away. I wonder if they know the truth, | Or if to fight they simply itch. I wonder if they know—forsooth, If they know which is fighting which. —W. D. .\ esbit, in Baltimore American. | THE DEAD ALIVE, g iv? A Drama of To-Day g ly Hubert Cecil. PESITTE the late hour, lights shone in the library, together with the glow and reflection of a big, cheerful fire. Drawn near to this was a round oitk table cov ered and littered by documents of all descriptions; while beside it with his head resting on his arms, Horace Nor cliffe, banker and broker, sat soundly sleeping. Outside the casement window, whose curtain had not been lowered, was a face sharp as that of any fox. The 6iiiall eyes, intense and glistening, were fixed immovably on the slumbering mnn, and the slim, dapper body quiv ered with triumphant excitement at the sight. Cautiously inserting a clasp knife blade, he deftly forced up the hasp, ■then stepped within, closed the window ' and dropped the curtain. Gliding noiselessly to the door, he turned the key in the lock. Presently, however, he shook the i banker smartly by the shoulder. A disapproving grunt was the only re sponse he received. But a vigorous slap on the hack brought Horace to his feet with a bound. Staring about him, dazed and bewildered, he finally perceived the amused intruder, at Whom be gazed long and incredibly. "Who are you?" lie demanded, when his astonishment permitted. "What do you want here?" "I answer to Jedrey, and my business here is—well, rather peculiar." "Then state it quickly and begone," said Horace sternly, with his hand on the hell, "unless you wish to he ar rested." "You may ring yourself blue, my dear sir," returned Jedrey, "hut uo one will heed you. It lias turned 12, and the servants are all in lied. Besides, you would be wise to hear me. A man of your prominence should always have a clear character, and not a mere pretence to one." "Why, what do you mean?" said Hor ace sharply. "Mean?" retorted Jedrey, "I mean to tell your history better even than you know it yourself." He then sketched the banker's career in an accurate manner. He told how when a susceptible young man he had married a woman who, older than him self, afterward proved to be unworthy of the love he had bestowed upon her cither before or after lie had made her his wife. As he had desired to avoid the scandal of a divorce he had left Iter to seek Ills fortune in a distant city. Keports that came to him from Lis old home told of the woman's downfall, disappearance, and finally of her death. Alter several years had passed he had met and married his present wife and was enjoying to the full tile happiness of perfect love. Mueli as he regretted to disturb this happiness, the visitor continued, he was obliged to inform him that his first wife was not dead, hut living and anxious to see him. "Heavens!" exclaimed Horace, nil npathy vanishing iu sudden dismay. "Alice alive? Alive? But no: impos sible! It Is false—hideously false! Be yond tlie slightest doubt she committed suicide." "Have yon over had absolute proof that llic burled woman was actually your wife?" "Xo, but ** "Then don't be deluded any longer," declared Jedrey, literally beside him self with glee. "She is no more dead tiian you are. She has been craving all these weary years to see her beloved husband. And, by the way, capital, and plenty of it, is the only thing to quiet her!" "If you do not instantly depart," shouted the banker, clenching ills hands fiercely, "1 will kill you—l swear it!" "The threat," ho said, "is both empty and foolish. However, I will obey your command If you promise to obey mine. The sole object of this visit, on behalf of Alice, is money. Money we must have—shall have. The amount decided upon is £20,000. Do you agree to pay It ?" "Twenty thousand pounds?" mut tered tlie hanker. "Yes! I agree! But 1 cannot pay it now. or here." "That is immaterial," chuckled Jed rey, advancing and unlatching the win dow. "Your word and my knowledge are sufficient. Meet me on the other side of the Dennon Arches, two nights hence, after dark. Be sure to bring the money. Fail to do so, and Alice herself will call upon your wife!" Shuddering at the appalling menace, Horace fastened the window and then. silently praying for some way of es cape, be hastened to unlock the door of the room, to find his wife, clad only in a loose, flimsy dressing gown. She had fainted away. Lifting her tenderly in his arms, he carried her hack to her own room, where he successfully applied restora tives. She had awakened, it seems, in the midst of a dreadful dream. She thought he was in danger, that she might lose him, that they would soon he parted forever. And Horace, with a cruel, aching pain at his heart, realized how prophetic must the dream become. To remain with his wife, should Alice chance to be alive, was utterly out of the question. His conscience and in tegrity, the whole man in him, forbade that. He would prove the dream either true or false, even though the result might break his heart. The next day, therefore, he instructed his valet to pack his portmanteaus, and forward the same to him, directly he sent for them. Then lie called on his lawyer, an old college chum. "George," he said, brokenly, gripping his hand, "certain circumstances have arisen which may necessitate my leav ing the country. I shall know definite ly to-morrow night. Everything is hor ribly unreal, as yet. But there, ask me no details, there's a good fellow. Only pledge your word to take this explana tion to my wife. Comfort her, George, In memory of the old dnys. Let no harm befall her, don't allow her to grieve or fret, 6ettle ray affairs for her." And ere the astonished man of law could accept or refuse the trust, Horace had rushed away. How the intervening hours passed, Horace was never clearly conscious. The appointed time, however, at last drew near, and faint and haggard, he quickly repaired to the place of meet ing, anxious, yet dreading, to learn the worst. Jedrey was already there, and stepped forward from the shadow of one of the arches. "That's right," he said briskly, "I'm glad I did not mistake my man. Brought the money, I suppose." "Why else should I be here?" replied Horace, striving to conceal his trem bling apprehension. "Yet even you cannot expect me to pay until Alice is produced alive." "That is easily done," said Jedrey, keenly enjoying his discomfiture. "Fol low me; It Isn't far." Dejected and wretched, with every hope now shattered, Horace trudged mournfully In the wake of Ills guide. Y'et had they thought to look behind, they must have Inevitably detected three figures creeping stealthily after them. Presently a dull patch of light be came visible. It shone from the win dow of a small, square cottage, old and dilapidated, whose door opened readily to the touch. The interior was a combined living and sleeping apartment. A low, filthy bed occupied one corner. In a chair at tlie side sat, or rather swayed, a woman truly Indescribable. Coarse matted hair hung danky about her head and shoulders. Her features, clenn and washed, must have been more than repellant; but, black, grimy, bloated, grinning, tbey presented an ap pearance shocking and repulsive in the extreme. "Hello, Horry, old boy," she cried, "how are you? Come, give us a kiss, dearie! What! Is my cherub shy? Ha! ha! ha! Then let me give you one!" The hanker surveyed her silently, dumbly, blankly. There bad been no deception, no trickery. "Are you satisfied yet?" queried Jed rey, sardonically. "Perhaps you would like still further proof. Alice," he com manded, turning to her, "show him your marriage certificate." "Ha. ha, lia!" giggled Alice, fumbling among the folds of lior tattered dress. "Proof does lie want, eh? Protends not to know his loving wifey, does be? See," she added, drawing forth a crumpled document, and lurching to ward him with It; "there you are, dearie, hi black and white!" Suddenly, however, the door flew wide hack, and George Grlmmell, dart ing inside, hastily snatched the paper and scanned it eagerly. "Hurrah!" lie shouted, throwing aside the drunken woman, who stumbled across the hod and passively lay there, half sobered by surprise. "As I imagined! before she met you! Mixed the certificates! Officer, officer, catch that mnn! Quick; don't let him escape! That's it; slip tlie jingles on liiin! Horace," lie continued, shaking ills hand excitedly, "you're a fool! Don't you comprehend, man? Jedrey's her husband—her real and first one! And Lucy's your wife—your Recoud and true one!"— New York News. The Fay Authors ICecclro tu 7npnn. Japanese authors receive so litilc pay for work iu Their own country that a native writer says there is 110 hope for any remarkable Japanese work to be produced. A Japanese man of let ters, iu order to live in bare comfort, bus to produce at least four or five long volumes a year, and it is seldom lie receives as much as two hundred dollars for a voluminous novel. In or dor to live decently be must earn at least seven hundred dollars a year. It will lie seen rroui these figures Hint ho can scarcely be expected to do any fine work at that rate of production. The only professional Japanese author iu America at present is Onoto Wa tatina. Miss Watnnna's striking suc cess iu 1 ills country ought to encourage other Japanese novelists to learn Eng ! lisli and come to America.—Harper's. Of those sentenced by English courts a3 habitual drunkards more than one third are wemeu. fiw r^i ("7 ¥¥ H l N xWbrn^ii>oi>j .lupnnese auctions are conducted on the silent plan. Each bidder writes Ids name and bid upon a slip ot paper, which be places in a bor. When the bidding is over the box is opened by the auctioneer and the goods are de clared the property ot the highest bid der. Dooley, a dog owned by a St. Louis woman, travels on a Pullman pass. The dog recently rode from New York City to St. Lottis, with stop-over privi leges at Atlantic City and Hot Springs, Va., on the same style of pass that furnished transportation for his mis tress and her husband. The pass bore the name "Mr. Dooley." An old Spanish war ship lias been lately discovered 200 feet under water off Messina. She was probably sunk in some naval engagement in the sev enteenth century. Six guns were re covered, including two sister guns, seven feet long, bearing, under the royal escutcheon of Spain, the date 1632. According to tradition among tho old villagers, the ground on the west shore of Canarsie Landing, New York, upon which stands to day a stone, shingle covered farmhouse, was bought by "old man Schenck"—pronounced Skank by the natives—for a small quantity of schnapps from the Canarsie tribe of Indians. This house is said to he more than 200 years old, and the deed for the ground on which it stands was scribbled on a clam shell, which shell, according to the same tradition, Is now In a museum in Washington. Curious marriage customs certainly prevail in China. Thus, a charming lady was not long ago married with great pomp to a red liower-vusc, rep resenting a deceased bridegroom who died a few days before bis wedding. His inconsolable betrothed declared that she would never marry any ono else, but would devote herself as a widow to the dead man's family. So the ceremony with the dower-vase was gone through to enable tile girl to enter the family, and the town proceeded to baild a granite arch to commemorate her devotion. The addresses in Persian upon letters which go through the postoifice at Cal cutta are often quaint and puzzling. An Indian paper recently translated one as follows: "If the Almighty pleases —Let this envelope, having arrived in the city of Calcutta, in the neighbor hood of Calootolnh, at the counting house of Slrajoodeen and Ilahdad, mer chants, be offered to and read liy the happy light of my eyes, of virtuous manners, and beloved of the heart— Meean Shaikh Inayut Ally, may liis life be loug. Written on the tenth of the blessed Rumzun, Saturday, in the year 12G0 of the Hegira of our Prophet, and dispatched at Bearing. Having with out loss of time paid the postage and received the letter, you will read It, and having abstained from food or drink, considering it forbidden to you, you will convey yourself to Jaunpoor, and you will know this to be a strict injunction." Uniform* In Hospitals* The decision that every orderly and attendant in a hospital under the con trol of city authority shall "wear a neat and suitable uniform has every thing in its favor, and there can be no valid argument against it. Would nny intelligent person now advocate n return to the old, unsatisfactory sys tem of many years ago, when the con ductors and brakemen on railroads wore clothes not different from those of the passengers? What endless con fusion and trouble were caused in those days by the lack of a distinguish ing garb on the part of the men who had charge of tho trains! And the employes of hospitals should, of course, be easily recognized even at a distance, by doctors, surgeons, superintendents and patients. Indisputably rules cau be enforced, discipline can be carried out, the standards of the institutions kept up and peace and quiet main tained in the wards more effectively and with less friction by orderlies who wear uniforms than by those who are clad in tho ordinary attire of private life. Hospital uniforms must be adopt ed wherever they have not yet been insisted upon.—New York Tribune. She Probably Know. Wlicn Ml'. Goodlieart camo home to supper be found Mrs. Goodlieart in a state akin to despondency, wiilcli was quite unusual with her. "Why. my dear, what is the matter!" he anxiously inquired. "Matter enough," said she. "Our ser vant lias loft us, and here is a letter from Sarah Armatige saying she will be here to-morrow, and expects to stay over Sunday with us. What on earth is to be done?" "Oh, that will he ail right," said Mr. Goodbeart. "Harold can act as dining room waiter. Millie can be maid of all work, and yon can be cook. Yen know you arc a good one. We shall get along swimmingly." "And wliat will you do?" inquired Mvs. Goodbeart. "Me? Oh, I'll be a gentleman," he replied. "Very well, we will try your plan, Edmund," she snid, cbeerfu'ly, "but I am afraid wc shall all feci rather awk ward in our unaccustomed roles." Mr. Goodlieart says she was as cheer ful as a lark all the remainder of the tveviing.—New York 'Li nes. MOLASSES AS CATTLE FOOD. Horses aixl Mules Have Thrived on It In Louisiana For Two Yenrs. Molasses has for two years been in general use in Louisiana fog the feed ing of horses, mules and all stock, and probably nine-tenths of the draught animals in the sugar district get tills food, either alone or mixed with oats or corn. The animals like it, and are kept In splendid condition by it. "Sugar mules," which are fed on molasses mainly, are worth from twenty to twenty-five per cent, more than the mules on cotton plantations, which are fed generally on cottonseed and cot tonseed meal. Molasses has been a waste product in Louisiana ever since the improved processes in the manufacture of sugar have extracted more of the saccharine from it than formerly. It has been a problem how to get rid of it The dis covery therefore that it could be used as a food for stock was of double value. Six months ago n factory was erected for the manufacture of cattle food from molasses. The process is very simple. The molasses Is mixed with corn or oats in nearly equal proportions. The mixture is pressed into a solid mass and dried and then ground into a fine powder. It is like the cottonseed meal with which cattle and horses are fed throughout the world. The horses, mules and cattle are very fond of the molasses, and they do better on it than on any other food fed to them. They keep fat and are capable of ex traordinary work in hauling heavy loads. Tills one factory turns out 150 tons of molasses preparation a day; and the stufT Is being rapidly substituted on the plantations for the raw molasses, not because it is any better, but lie cause it is more conveniently handled. So far the use of molasses for feed ing horses has been couflned to New Orleans and the sugar districts, but by this process, which enables it to be handled ensily, 1t is likely to be shipped elsewhere. Only a small part of the Louisiana molasses crop, which runs to from 30,000,000 to 50,000,000 gallons a year, is used for horse and cattle food or in any other way; and a large proportion of it Is thrown away or burned in the furnace with the bagasse and other waste and refuse.—New York Sun. Old Bridal Customs. There used to be a custom of strew ing dowers before the bridal couples as they went to the church and from the church to the house. "Suppose the way with fragrant herbs were strewing, All things were ready, we to the church were going, And now suppose the priest had joined our hands," is a quaint old verse that refers to this custom. The Persians Introduce a tree at their marriage feasts laden with fruit, and it is the place of the guests to try to pluck this without the bride groom observing If successful, they must present the bridal couple with a gift a hundred times the value of the object removed. In Tuscany brides wear jasmine wreaths, and there is a legend that a once reigning Grand Duke who at great expense procured this dower for his own particular gnrden, gave orders to his gardener not to part with any dowers or clippings; but the gardener, who was in love, took a sprig to his sweetheart as a gift. She, being shrewd, planted it and raised from it several small plants which she sold to the Duke's envious neighbors nt a great price. In a short time she had saved enough money to enable her lover and herself to marry and start housekeeping, and so the Tuscans have a snying that "The girl worthy of wearing the jasmine wreath is rich enough to make her husband happy." Cupid And tho Coal PAiiilne. However loving and trusting two young hearts may be, says the Phila delphia Saturday Evening Post, it is a foregone conclusion that they can in no way affect the price of coal this winter, and it is a brave young man who would take his fair young bride by tlic band and face the whole world with coal nt S2O a ton. Therefore the weddings are being postponed by hun dreds of thousands until more auspi cious times, and everybody knows what that means. That there is many a slip is nowhere more truly spoken than in reference to engaged couples, and a wedding postponed has but one chance in five of ever coming off. Worse than that, the coal strike and the consequent boosting of prices arc going to have a similar blighting effect upon next spring's crop of engage ments and weddings, since only the fabulously wealthy can afford this winter to allow Cholly and Araminta to hold down the sofa in the warm and cosy parlor until all hours of the night. Stern papas will enforce the early clos ing rules with unheard of rigidity when S2O coal is being consumed in the fur nace. Parlor ducts will become an un known quantity, impecunious young men will have to go to bed immediate ly after dinner in order to keep warm, and there will be no engagements fol lowing the winter season of tete a tetes. ltorn, MarrleU and Hurled at Sea. The body of Captain Richard Mars den, who was for nineteen years Har bor Master at Gi'avesend, England, was committed to the deep off the Goodwin Sands tho other day. Cap tain Marsden wns born and married at sea. I Deep-sea water for study is procurea by means of specially prepared bottles. Some Men Who Bide Hobbies * Good Thing For a Farmer to Know How to Do One Thing Well * * —Some Examples of Success in Specialty Farming. * * LYNN BROWN. OXFORf OHIO. * IN this day and generation it seems necessary for every one to have a specialty, no matter what his occu pation or profession. While in farming it is necessary to raise at least a little of a good many tilings, and. In fact, do more or less general farming, It is the man who learns one particular branch of the business better than any one else in his community, and then pushes it for all it is worth who makes the most money out of it. This specializing becomes more and more pronounced. Each doctor lias Ills specialty, and many refuse to treat anything outside of their own particu lar lines. The farmer, however, eanuot be so exclusive, as a farm must have stock, and it takes various crops to raise stock, and it requires the use of horses to mnke crops, so his line of work must be somewhat general. This need not keep blm from learning his favorite branch to perfection and put ting the main part of bis energy and thought in that direction. I should like to introduce some of our best men and their hobbies in this lo cality. I speak of them as hobbies, but, of course, they amount to more than this with them, because they have become the most successful part of their life work. One man, Jones. Is known to all as the plum man. His farm was never much good for cropping, so some years ago he put out a large plum orchard containing all the best varieties and many kinds that people here had never seen before. He then made a complete study of spraying, pruning and plum growing in general until lie bad bis business down to so fine a point that he is now as sure of a plum crop as arc his neighbors of a wheat or corn crop. And what a harvest lie has reaped this year, with all other fruit very scarce and his trees full of perfect beauties at $3 a bushel! Surely ills plums are bet ter than the proverbial political plums, which occasionally drop to a favored few. He has worked for his. King is the honey man, and people often wonder why his frames of honey are filled so evenly and are always so clean and white that they have the ap pearance of being sand - papered, and how he gets the bees to put so nearly an even pound in each one. Ask Mr. King and he might say: "Spend as much time and work on bees as I have spent, and you may find out. It is too long a story to tell, and has cost too much to give away." Some men with hig, rich farms pre fer to make some of the general crops, like corn and wheat, their specialty, and there must be as much to learn about these commoner crops that most farmers do not know as there is about the more rare ones. That this is true Is proved by friend Smith's success with wheat. All of his neighbors like to get their seed from him. and I un derstand that he shipped two carloads down into Virginia tills year, so far reaching is his reputation for good va rieties and clean seed. But then It is easy for him to raise clean wheal, free from weed seed, for he has clean land, rorliaps that clean land is part of the secret of his success, nnd who knows what time and labor It may have cost him to get and keep his land this way? I know that he al ways cuts his stubble over once, and if necessary twice, so that no weeds may mature seed; neither are his fence rows devoted to the production of fancy weed seeds, to be scattered whichever way the wind may blow. Wilson, the corn man, lias some very peculiar ideas about the time of plant ing and manner of cultivation, and In the spring you will find his neighbors laughing at him, but later in the sea son they begin to think that maybe ho is "onto" his job after all, ami perhaps they will try his plan—as far as they know It—next time, for he surely docs get corn. But I must not fail to make Mr. nan kins known to you. He is the man with the small, rich farm, that looks like a patchwork quilt. Little piles of queer looking stuff that we don't even know the names of may be seen all over the place, and very little corn or wheat or other crops that go t.o make a farm look substantial in sight. What has come over Hankins these last few years? He used to be a sensible man and raise good corn, wheat and oats, but he must have got mixed up with some of those chaps who run the ex periment stations and turned ills farm into one. He is another mail who is laughed at, but he simply turns his back nnd laughs with liis neighbors, so that they cannot see his satisfaction at their mirth, for his secret is also too good to give away. If these neighbors who think he is wasting his time 011 foolish experiments will go to his house and look in the lower left-hand corner of the old walnut bookcase, between the family Bible nnd Webster's Una bridged they will find several papers, contracts signed by some of the most prominent seedsmen of the land, and, yes, down below is John Hankins' scrawl. What can It mean? Only that John is going to raise 2000 pounds of kale seed at a price a pound tlint fairly startles them, and if they run over the other contracts they will see that If their lucky neighbor fulfills his contracts—and lie generally succeeds in doing so—he will make twice as much money over his eighty acres as they ever have made over twice the amount of laud. They also used to laugh at him for raising a great deal of sor ghum, as he was never seen hauling any to the mill for molasses, but when they found that be could dispose j forty bushels of seed from an acre at a price close to the dollar mark, and Jit the same time have lots of good feed left, they began to imitate him some what.—New York Tribune. Snow Mushroom*. Dr. Vauglian Cornish in the Ceo graphical Journal treats of the snow waves and snow drifts of Canada. From Montreal as far west as Port Ar thur, that is to say, for 1000 miles, he found the snow moderately dry, as in the Pentlands and Highlands of Scot land, but from "Winnipeg to Medicine Hat it was dry, granular and rough on # ' the surface. Parts of the prairie were swept bare of snow in the neighbor hood of snow banks, and the landscape resembled a white desert. In the Rock ies the snow was nioister, and at Gla-J' cicr House in the Selkirks, a stump ot\ tree two feet thick supported a cap or snow nine feet across the eaves pro jecting three feet six inches all around the pedestal, and the whole resembling a gigantic mushroom or toadstool. An other broken tree four feet thick bad a snowcap twelve feet across, the eaves projecting four feet all around. Some of these "snow mushrooms" must have weighed a ton. The layers of snow in them bend with gravity downward, leaving a hollow about the trunk. Paris Under Arms. One night last week there were font organized battles in the streets of Paris, where the revolver was used and the pavements littered with empty car tridge cases. No value was set on the life of a passer-by The roving bauds of scoundrels bad issued challenges and come Into the very heart of city? within sight of the Comcdie Fran-' caise. The consternation that prevails in Paris is noticeable, and to this is added the fact that the street lamps are turned out a little after 1 o'clock. There Is not a soul on the terraces of the cafes after midnight, and people walk home In the middle of the streets. The leaders of the different bauds, who bear the most fantastic names, kindly assure the public that they have noth iug to fear, that the warfare is purely between one clan and another, and all i they have to do is to keep out of the line of fire.—Sketch. Cuvier'* Collection Doomed. . Tlie splendid cabinet of Comparative anatomy in Paris begun by Cuvier, the distinguished naturalist, in 1790, and the completion of \yliicli occupied twenty-one years, is to be demolished by the authorities of the Jardin <'jtb Plantes. Among the numerous valu able specimens gathered and classified by Cuvier are the embalmed remains of the huge ,rbinoceros brought to his Versailles menagerie by Louis XIV. and which the gay monarch used to visit each week attended by his Court. The carcass thus honored by the King and his sycophants was saved with difficulty by Cuvier In 1793 from the incensed revolutionists, who desired to burn it because It had been one of their "tyrant's" amusements. Three-Toc.l Hor.c. Foniul. Fossil horses of (he three-toed type have been discovered by the exploring party supported by the William C. Whitney fund now in quest of the re mains of these animals in the West, ac cording to Professor Osborn, of the Museum of Natural History, who said that the fossils included a herd of flve.L One skeleton is nearly complete, bun dle others ure fragments. Hitherto only pieces of skulls and limbs have been found. Tile fossils have been shipped to tile museum, and will. Pro fessor Osborn says, add an important stage to the history and development of tlie horse in America.—New York Times. Doctor** Incomes In England. The British Medical Journal ventured sn estimate of the average income that might be expected by the general prac titioner in England, and put'it at S3OOO to $3500. The estimate was copied Into several daily papers, and lnis produced a large crop of correspondence, teem ing with ridicule and indignation. The general practitioners, who ought to know, declare that only a small pro portion of their number earn so even after years of arduous work. The competition brought about by the over- I crowded state of tiro profession is, they declare, so great that it is a cruelty to induce men, by inflated estimates, to enter it. Olil linman. Uueil Tablets. Stamps have been found in England which have been shown were used by the Itomans to stamp remedies for pro ducing clearness of vision, or for doing away with dimness of sight. The ob ject aimed at by tlie medicament was specified in the stamp. It is notewor thy that the sunups so far discovered were designed for remedies for ocular diseases. The preparations were hard ened with gum or some viscid sub stance, and were thus ready to be liquefied at any time. Thus our sup posedly very modern device of trllur- . ates or compressed tablets is only a re- 1 vival of an auclcht Roman custom. In Hie Courtroom. "Your Honor and Gentlemen of tlie Jury, I acknowledge the reference of counsel of the nlher side to my gray hair. My hair is gray, and it will con tinue to be gray so long as I live. The hair of that gentleman is black, and will continue to he black so long us he dyes."—New York Times.