The North Carolinian" . The North Cabdmai JOB FIHNTING . ESTABLXSIXMX3I7 Is sapplied with aU the reqnlaitee tor doingf dnt-clsss Job Printing tasuMC. and promptly executes Wepdcto Caim, Pomma, i furnsa Caant, UaxDstLLS, Be! Jt EM ClDJ, PBOOaAlOUS, Bau. Casus, Billmas. FajicT Show Cum, Oooaa Biixa or Faas, . Statu errs. War Cakds, raxrsLrrs, Law Caan aim Otsctruas, Potwrs, fcru, la the latest and neatest styles. And at the tow - . M I ESTABLISHED IN 1S69. rm ft rV I Offlce-Korta Carolinian Bid's, Main St One door east of Albemarle Hoaee. TERMS $1.50 a Year, In Advance. If not naid In advance S3. 00 will be charged. ' BATES OF ADTKRTlSlJia I One square, one insertion, tl.OO; two inser tions, $1.50; pne month, $2.00; three months $4.00; six months, $3.00; one year, $12.00. For larger advertisements liberal oontracta will be made.- Business Notices in local eolnmn, ten cents a linfe. Obituary Notices, firs cents s line. PALE1I0N JOHN, Editor and Proprietor. Devoted to the Interests of the City, the County and the District. TEHH8 81.50 a Tear, in Advance VOLUME XIX. ELIZABETH CITY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1887. NUMBER 18. est prices, Uraers by mail wul receive proa attention. MUD . Europe's annual expenditure for armies and fleets is $3,887,500,000. The gate $24,113,057,655, on -which $1,000, 000,000, is annually paid out for interest. I The annual wood consumption of the United States for building and other purposes is something over two thousand millions of cubic feet. We still have a large- area of forest land, but with a wasteful and improvident management how long can this last? It is reckoned that it costs sixty dol lars to keep each of the one hundred thmisand families of Minnesota warmed ana fed during a single winter nearly the value of one-third of her wheat crop in 188(5. Fuel is comparatively abund ant and cheap at the South. The London Musical Standard pub lishc3 the names of people of note in the musical world who died last year. There are included 250 names and many nationalities arc represented. The aver age age attained was high 61 years There were four suicides, all singers. One cantatricc was assassinated and another was "hissed to death." The recent long drought in England caused great embarrassment to the um brella tratje, as sales nearly cea&d. One manufacturer who was sued for a debt of 5 declared that nothing but the drought' prevented payment of the debt, nndthe Court granted him a month's res pite, in the hope that rain might come nnd umbrellas be salable. Ticrc are two church bells at Messilla, Mexico, that are valuable. They were cast in 1775, and it is said that just be fore the casting was made at least $1000 worth of gold and silver jewelry was dropped into the molten mass of metal by the devout, who thought thus to pro pitiate their patron saints. The bells are to be melted and the precious metals re covered. According to tho latest newspaper directory there are 15,420 newspapers now published in the United States and Canada, of trjh 11,614 are weeklies. In New York State there are 1,591 newspa pers. The total single issue of all publica tions is estimated at 30,165,250, from which it would seem that almost every it t r i riii- A- - person in trie unitea states 01 an age to read peruses pretty regularly more newspapers. one or Wno are tne peojiie tnac leave money on deposit, and fa 1 to call for it? A lit tle information on this point comes from Connecticut, which has eighty-four sav ings lauks at present, not over twenty of the m mer coming under the law re quiring reports concerning unknown de positors. The amount of deposits which have remained without claimants for twenty years is known to be over $75, 000. Of this, $21,000 is held by the Society for Savings in Hartford, $17,000 by the New London Savings Bank, $12, 500 by the Norwich Savings Bank, $7, 000 by the Bridgeport Savings Bank, $4,000 by the Middlctown, and not far from $4,0u0 by the Norwalk Savings Bank. The report of the appointment divis ion in the Post Office department con tains the following figures for the past iiscalyear: Number of offices established, 3,018; number discontinued, 1,500; ap pointments on resignations and com missions expired, 5,863; appointments on removals and suspensions, 2,584; ap pointments on changes of names and sites,' V82; appointments on deaths of postmasters, 589. The total number of appointments of postmasters of all grades during the year was 13,079. The total number of appointments for the years 1885 and 1886 was 22,747 and 9,547 re spectively, making a total for the three years of 46,373. The total number of post offices of all grades in operation on July 1, 1887, was 55,157. Attention is being called to the enor mous loss of stock that has taken place on the ranches of Montana and Wyo ming during the past winter, owing to luck of food and to exposure. The cat tle are required to provide for them selves on the bleak plains of these terri tories aud where the ranch is over stocked and the pastures bare many ani mals must necessarily perish. "This," Si'.ys the New York Epoch, "is a matter which sooner or later will require legis lation of some kind, for to permit cattle to starve and freeze to death . is surely the worst kind of cruelty. It may also be a question whether any of that region is suitable for stock in winter, with the exception of a narrow strip under the shadow of the Rocky Mountains and subject Ac the Chinook winds." The reclamation from the desert of portions of northern Africa by means of artesian wells, seems to be going on pros perously. The first well has constantly increased its flow, and now irrigates an area of 1500 acres, on which are grow ing many thousand palm trees, besides garden crops for the support of the pop ulation which has flocked to the place, and a second well has been driven About two miles from tho first, which already delivers nearly twice as much water as the first. If the flow from the second can be distributed as successfully as that from the first, the two wells, neither of which is 300 feet deep, will bring into cultivation an area of more than seven square miles, forming an oasis of con siderable importance, and it seems now probable that the French government may take measures for restoring their an cient fertility to tracts which were one) renown foj their fruUfwlntse. Bear It In Hind. "Well begun" may be "half-done;" But beginning is not ending; Great successes ne'er are won . By only wishing and intending. ' "Start" is good, but "stay" is better, 'Start" alone ne'er won a race; "Start and stick" is sure prize-getter, "Staying powers" takes foremost place. Broad and deep lay the. foundation, But be sure yeu count the cost; Or yOuH rue, in deep vexation, Treasure spent and labor lost. Bold beginner, mark his folly 1 Soon his zeal and means diminish; Rash or craven coward wholly, He began, but could not finish. . James Yeames. BILLY'S RELAPSE. Two little girls stood at the foot of the stairs leading to the elevated railway station at Canal street at 6 o'clock P. M. They were dressed exactly alike in white dresses, with blue sashes tied around their waists. They were waiting for papa. Train after train stopped at the station and a steady stream of homeward-bound feet came pattering down the stairs. A big, portly man, who had stopped at the station to light a cigar, looked at the children for they were very winsome and said : "Are you waiting for somebody, little girls?" "Yes, sir," replied the eldest eagerly. ' 'Me an' Beulah is waiting for papa. He always comes at 6 o'clock. We come to meet him every night, and " "He's going to bring me a gra' big peach anV two Jackson balls, ain't he, Hattie?" interrupted the smallest child, her blue eyes opening and her lips part ing with pleasureable anticipation. "Maybe he failed off the big bridge. Did he?" The golden head begau to droop and the little lips to tremble. The big man smiled and said : "Oh, no, I guess not. He'll be along very soon." Then he took from his pocket a handful of loose change, gave . the -children each a cent, lifted them successively to a level with hi3 bearded chin, and kissed : them. Then he re sumed his cigar and. his homeward way. The clock in a jewelry store near by ticked off fifteen more weary minutes, but the familiar face came not. A bare headed woman ran quickly around the corner. "Hasn't your father come yet, girls P ; said she cautiously. "No'm, he ain't. En I hain't got my peach," replied Beulah. "Well, never mind. Perhaps he'll come on the horse cars." With many lingering looks at the rail way station the childrenwere led away up the street. The teapot was simmered on the oil stove and the " supper table was waiting when they arrived at the flat. Hunger made the children forget the absent father for the time. Beulah was placed in the high chair and Mrs. Rogers proceeded to cut the home-made loaf. "I want peaches first," said Beulah impatiently. "No, no, my child. -Bread and milk comes first, and peaches last," said the mother. . "I don't like bread and milk; it's nasty," said the child, drumming im patiently on her plate with a spoon. "I shall have to put my little girl to bed without her supper if she does not behave herself." ' Beulah sulked awhile. Then evidently making up her mind to get through a disagreeable job- quickly, she stopped 'chewing on her thumb and began shov elling the bread and milk so rapidly into her mouth that she began to choke. Mrs. Rogers slapped her on the back be tween the shoulders and a piece of crust flew out of tho child's mouth half way across the room. The absence of the father was forgotten in the excitement of the moment. Beulah was snatched from her chair in a twinkling and pressed to her mother's breast. When the dan ger was over and the clouds were clear ing away Beulah stammered out between her staccato sobs : 'Ma-ma I I I want m m y peaches I" Beulah was ladled out a larger share of the peacTies than she was entitled to, but before she had eaten half the fruit her head began to droop, like a violet at sunset. Hattie - undressed herself and put on her nightgown, of which achieve mcnt she was very proud, while Beulah lay in sorrow's haven and was rocked into dreamland, while Mrs. Rogers sang liftle song, keeping time with the swing of the rocking chair, to the effect that Mr. Rogers was shaking a dreamland tree. Even while she sang Mrs. Rogers wondered drearily whether her husband was not engaged in some more important business. Perhaps he had been run over by the cars, perhaps he had been sun struck. But then, she thought, why should I worry? He has been de tained at the store, most likely, and will be home in a little while. Despite her attempt at cheerfulness Mrs. Rogers trembled as she tucked the blankets around her children, and a tear drop fell upon Beulah's rounded cheek, which made the child stir uneasily. The teapot was pouring out a steaming pro test against being left so - long on the stove when Mrs. Roarers returned to the kitchen, so she took the pot off the stove. After the dirty dishes had been washed Mrs. Rogers set the table for two, cut up some more peaches, and began her vigil it the window waiting for her husband. She had often told him, jokingly, that she could hear his footsteps two blocks away and he had made laughing denial. quick fall of certain boot heel upon the pavement would have been recognized half a mile away, so acute was her hear ing. . The night wore on; the gaslights flickered down the long street like a torch light procession ; the trucks had long since ceased their rumble over the . cob blestones. - Eight, 9, 10 o'clock came and the bell was not rung. ' The air was getting chilly.;; Mrs. Rogers wrapped a shawl around her shoulders and fell asleep from utter weariness. .. At about 5.30 o'clock a man of 30 years had stopped at a candy stand at the corner of Ann street and Park row aad bought five round pieces of candy called Jackson balls. At a stand near the big bridge four big blushing peaches were placed in a paper bag and handed to him. While standing in front of the Coroners office waiting for a truck to pass by, a very solid hand came down upon his shoulder and a hearty voice sa luted him with: .' " "Hello, Billy, old boyl How in thun der are you? Haven't seen you in a dog's age. Where do you keep yourseU nowadays? JIarried, eh! and got two little children! Well, well, how pater nal you do look ! Let's go and have a drink. You ain't a Prohibitionist, I hope ?'' "No, but " "Oh, never mind the buts. A glass of sherry won't hurt you." And, yielding to the persuasion of his old friend, Tom Barker, who had been oyer on the Pacific slope for the past five years, Billy went into the saloon 4and plighted his friendship in a glass of yellow wine. Now, it happened that Billy had been a very dissipated fellow before his marriage. He had gone on sprees for a week at a time, but during the five years of his wedded life not a drop of liquor had passed his lips. That one glass of wine fired his pulses with the old intoxicating glow. The wistful faces of his children and the horrible suspense of his wife were forgotten in the magic spell. The two men drank deep, drank eft. They visited all their old time resorts, and became very effusive and affectionate in a maudlin way. At 3 o'clock they were in a Harlem saloon, treating all hands and shouting in such a disorderly way that the saloon keeper was obliged to put them out upon the sidewalk. Then thev got on a Third avenue elevated train and rode to the Battery. Here the conductor lugged both the men out on the platform while they sang a duet in very inarticulate ones about how they marched through Georgia, while the conductor expressed his belief that neither of them had been outside the Fourth ward in his life. Daybreak found them on Twenty-third street in a very sorry plight. Tom stood with his feet wide apart and leaning agaicst a lamppost. Billy stood in front of him with his forefinger raised, "Le's play S'n'ny sc'l, Tom. Y'll be . sc'l, I'll be t'ch'r. Ar' y' on t' me, ol felT' -: ' Tom blinked spasmodically and swayed from side to side like a hen on a clothes line in a windy day. His hat fell off and rolled into the gutter. Tom held up his right hand. "T'ch'r, kin I g' out!" "Wha' for?" "Hat fell out w'nd'r." "Ye'il both av ycz go afore th' Jcdgc in th' mornin' av yez don't move on," said a burly policeman, who struck both men some smart blows across the back with his club and pushed them toward Broadway. At 7 o'clock they were sleeping off the effects of the spree in a Bowery lodging house. When Billy awoke at 6 o'clock that evening with a headache that threatened to crack his skull and a throat which seemed to be lined with lime, he was overcomejwith remorse. He knew that his children would be waiting for him at the foot of the stairs. In fancy he could see Beulah's wistful blue eyes scanning every face as it passed by. He would have started immediately, filled as he was with contrition, but Tom persuaded him to have one more parting drink. This drink was supplemented with an other. Then Tom suggested that Billy should try a shandygaff. To put a wnisKey sour ana a snanaygan into jux taposition usually is disastrous as was proved in this case. Tom's fertile brain suggested other liquid mixtures, and the spree continued all day, and ended in both men being locked up in the Tombs, The next morning Tom and Billy were brought before Judge Duffy, who delivered a little lecture on the evils of intemperance, advised Billy to go home to his wife and children, and discharged them. - Billy felt the disgrace of his ar rest very keenly, but Tom cheered him with the remark that no one had recog' nized him. Billy wanted to start for home immediately, but Tom per suaded him to go to a hotel, from whence his clothes were sent out to . be cleaned and pressed, his high hat was neatly blocked, and his face shaved. While waiting for his clothes Billy chewed cloves and other aromatic spices all day for prudential reasons. At 5 o'clock Billy" came out of the ho tel looking much the same as usual. His nerves were a trifle shaky, and dark cir cles environed his eyes. He and Tom went to the candy stand at tne ccrner of Ann street, where Billy bought five more Jackson balls. He also purchased ten peaches each one of which was lar cer. rosier, and more luscious than the ones he had bought two days previous, "Will the children be at the station!" said Tom. ' .'. "Certainly they will; but I can easily satisfy them. The thing that bothers me is. What can I tell my wife!" fell into the hands of wicked bunco men, and' that after enticing you to their den they drugged you with a glass of ginger ale. She has confidence in you, hasn't 8hef i "Implicit." ! "Well, it wont do for. you to destroy that confidence by working the honesty racket. Of course you don't mean to do so again, etc., and Yankee Doodle; no sen sible man does. The end justifies the means, my boy." Billy hesitated about taking Tom's ad- vice, and while he hesitated the train stopped at Canal street and the two men stepped upon the platform. Tom ran, to the head of the stairs. Looking down he saw two little figures, hand in hand, looking upward. "Billy," said he, "if you will take me to a convenient woodpile and hammer me with an oak tree you will do me a great favor." Here Tom used his hand kerchief very freely and muttered some thing about "that cussed catarrh." The two men shook hands, and Billy ran down the stairs. Ho had taken but two steps downward when Beulah saw him and cried out, while she danced up and down with delight: "Is ye got my peaches, papa ?" Yes, papa had the peaches and the Jackson balls, too. Such a time as there was; to be sure! Such bulging cheeks and merry gurgles of laughter 1 And such an utterly crushed and shame faced man never walked up Canal street before carrying two children in his arms. Billy's wife heard the laughter and the familiar footstep and her heart started beating a wild tattoo. , She ran down and opened the door. She saw how Billy trembled; she marked the dark circles around his eyes and his averted head. She had seen him that way before. . . j "Billy," said she, reproachfully. "Well Kitty," stammered Billy, "the bunco men " "Yes, yes, Billy, I know all about it. You have been out with the bunco men before. But I wouldn't cultivate their acquaintance if I were you, Billy." This was said with such an appealing look, such a moist eye, and such an evi dent appreciation of the whole situation that Billy was 6truck all of a heap. His wife's conduct in never asking for a bill of particulars nor nagging him with reproaches burned such a big hole in his conscience that he thinks he is well fortified asrainst future assaults of the enemy. New York Sun. From Father's Well. ' Is there no hope ?' ' "There is none!" The doctor laid down the heavy hand whose rapid, flickering pulse he was counting, and turned toward ths weep ing family of the sick man. r "He may last till morning, but more likely he will pass away at the turn of the night." j "He does not know me," sobbed the wife. "He is not conscious. " answered the mind wanders.' doctor, gravely. "His "Will he suffer much?" ' ' 'No ; he is very happy . He is tal king in his sleep. Do not disturb him," said the doctor as he left the patient, i whose ife he was powerless to save. ' ; ' The dying man, who was so poor at this moment that fie could not purchase one hour of time, was rich in the he was about to worldly possessions leave forever. He had houses and lands, and bank stock. He had rich viands to tempt his failing appetite. It was his pleasure to drink of manv different wines at his grand dinners. Yet his restless spirit craved one luxury a simple, homely thing that all his wealth could not buy. Listen! He is speaking and they bend eagerly to hear. He is asking for a drink. His wife presses a goblet to his lips filled with a sweet and cooling draught. He refuses it. , Then his loving child pours out a glass of favorite wine and tenderly begs him to take it. "No! no! not that!" He speaks wildly, and they bend low and try to distinguish hi3 broken and faltering words. ! "Bring me the -gourd!'' ; "What does he mean?" asks his wife in despair. "It is hanging just inside the curb." "Papa, dear, what is it?" asks his sweet-faced child. ' 'I want a drink of fresh water from father's well." That was all. He closed his weary eyes to open them in his heavenly home where, when life's little dream is over, we shall all one day slake our thirst from our Father's well. Detroit Free Press. ; ' . . Turning Death Into Life. Death Valley is to be turned into an ostrich ranch. A Mexican has fourteen well-grown chicks that-he hatched out there in his little ranch near the borax works from eggs brought from the neighborhood of Loa Angeles. The eggs were buried in the hot sand, and of nights the ground was covered with blankets to retain the heat it absorbed during the day. The ranch is about 220 feet below the level of the sea. Vir ginia (Nev.) Enterprise. Fearful Responsibility. -Old lady Conductor, I hope there ain't going to be a collision. Conductor I guess not. Old laiy I want you to be very keer- ful, X'vj got two dozen eggs n this. A RICH REDSKIN. An Indian Who is Building a Railroad Out West. The Wonderful Career of An Inventive Aboriginal. A recent letter from Newton. Mo, to the Kansas City Journal says: Had any one predicted a quarter of a century ago that an American Indian would build a railroad he would have been considered a fit object for a lunatic asylum. But to-day the people of Newton County, Mo., a county adjoining the Indian Ter ritory have witnessed a scene such as man never before beheld. Matthias Splitlog, a half Cayuga and half Wyan dotte Indian, born in an Indian village in Canada, today at Neosho drove the first spike for the Kansas City, Fort Smith and Southern Railway. This di vision of the Kansas City, Fort Smith and Southern railway was chartered the 8th of last March under the laws of the State of Missouri, with a capital of $3,000,000, and now there are about 35 miles graded and ready for the iron. Mr. Splitlog has .furnished'-the "sin ews of war" out of his own ample for tune, nd i3 backed by heavy capitalists to complete the road, and before the 1st of next January he will have the cars running from Joplin, in Jasper County, to the town of Splitlog, in McDonald County, a distance of about thirty-five miles, and Matthias Splitlog, the mil lionaire Indian, who is probably the rich est man of bis race, will henceforth be known all over the country as the only Indian railroad man (at least the first) in the United States or in the whole world. The occasion of driving the first spike on the main line of this new road was a matter of more than ordinary interest to the people of Neosho. At 3.15 there were about one thousand people assem bled at the point where the main line crosses the 'Frisco track. After music by the Indian band from the Territory, and selections by the Neosho band, Mr. Charles W. Smith, Auditor of tho con struction company, held the spike in po sition, and in four bold strokes Mr. Splitlog drove the spike home into a carefully selected whiteoak tie. Cheer after cheer was given for the road, Matthias Splitlog, Neosho and the enter prise, after which many came to the track to look at the spike. Mr. Split log wielded the sledge with a familiarity and precision which indicated that he had used his sledge with good effect when he built his steamboat on the De troit river. Mr. Splitlog was born in the year 1813,, and while a boy was apprenticed to a carpenter and millwright, and, al though his wages were only $7 per month, young Splitlog thought he was getting rich. ' He imbibed a love for machinery and inventions which has made his life a useful and eventful one. In the year 1842 young Splitlog joined the Wyandottes, who were the last of the Indian tribes then in Ohio. In 1843 Splitlog came west With some of the tribe, and found, after his arrival at Westport landing (now Kansas City), that he only had 50 cents in his pocket. He induced an old Indian to go his se curity for the price of an axe. With this axe he cut cordwood for the steam boats at 25 cents per cord, and, after paying for the axe, which cost $2, he soon saved enough to buy a pony. About the year 1864 he married Eliza Barnett, a grandniece of Harry Jacques, the'old Indian who went his security for the price of the axe. Her father was head chief of the Wyandottes when he died in 1838. Her mother was a part Wyandotte and part Seneca; Indian. They have a family of five children four sons and one daughter. Splitlor was never idle, and in most of his under takings he was successful At an early day he built a mill near Wyandotte, which was first run by horse-power and afterwards by steam. Sp'.itlog's mill was a success and was long an old land mark near Wyandotte. He began to speculate in real estate, and, although he can neither read nor write, he has been one of the most successful specula tors in the neighborhood of Kansas City, and is to-day worth over $1,000,000. Manv interesting incidents could be written in connection with his usefu life. A Chinese Anaesthetic. A curious anaesthetic used by the Chin esc has recently been made known by Dr. U. Lambuth in his third annual report of the Soochow Hospital. It is obtained by placing a frog in a jar of flour and irri tating it by prodding it. Under -these circumstances it exudes in a liquid, which forms a paste with a portion of the flour. This paste, dissolved in water, was found to possess well-marked anajs thctic properties. After the finger had been immersed in the liquid for a few minutes it could be pricked with needle without any pain being felt, and numbness of the lips and tongue was produced by applying the liquid to them Boston Journal. A Youthful Financier. A young financier, aged 4, who was given 5 cents for every mouse caught in a small trap, finally asked leave to spend the proceeds. The nurse was told to go wherever : he led her, to see what he proposed . buying. He passed all the toy and candy shops, but paused before a hard ware store, and pointing to the window exclaimed, triumphantly:'. "I buy more mouse trap, Fanny "- Epoch, Bashful Bridegrooms. , A justice of the peace in Saratoga coun ty recently joined a pair who were so em barrassed that they hardly knew what they were doing. The man wore a white straw hat which he whirled on his fin- ger before the ceremony began. When j told to stand up he jumped before the justice with the greatest alacrity. For a few moments he did not know what to do with the hat, but finally found his way out of the difficulty by putting it between his knees. This was too much for the bride. With the handle of hr parasol 6he caught the hat, pulled it from its position and then, abashed at her audacity, dropped hat and parasol to the floor. The same justice tells a story of an other couple who came to be married. The man was dreadfully puzzled, and without realizing the act pulled a cigar from his pocket and began twirling it around. When that portion of the cere mony was reached where bride and groom join hands, he happened to have the cigar in his right hand. What to do with the cigar he apparently did not know. The justice paused a minute and then again directed the pair to join hands. By this time the poor fellow's embarrassment was painful. He gave one agonized look at the justice of the peace and stuck the cigar in his mouth. Before the ceremony could be conclud ed the justice had to take the cigar from between the man's -lips. Rochester Herald. Caught in the Ice. A ship once fairly beset, and strongly held during a gale, is completely be yond control ; and no real good can be accomplished by the severe tasks of warping and continual shifting of ice- anchors, which only exhaust the crew and render them more or less unable to :e a thorough advantage of a favora ble situation should one occur. s Parry, however, under these circumstances, did not hesitate to employ his crews to their utmost at the hawsers aud sails, plainly acknowledging that "the exertions made by heaving at hawsers, or otherwise, are of little mora service than the occupa tion they furnished to the men's miads under such circumstances of difficulty; for, when the ice is fairly acting against the ship, ten times the strength and in genuity could in reality avail nothing." But the greater majority of ice naviga tors are now decidedly oE the opinion that it is best to yield to fate, and re serve the men's strength for palpable efforts. Still, in these besetments, tne mind of the commander must be ever active ; for new events follow each other so rapidly, that a favorable chance for rescue is passcil before it . can be fairly weighed in all its aspects. Swiss Cross. 1 . Balloons in High Altitudes. The recent attempt made by some French aeronauts to reach a great height above the earth has not been productive of any particular scientific results. The balloon in which the ascent was made reached an altitude of over 20,000 feet without the occupants of the car ex periencing any'ill effects, except a tend ency to faintness on the part of one of them. When about 12 years ago a simi lar attempt was made, and the height of ,000 feet was reached, it was with fa tal results to three out of the four a: ro nauts. Ulio success of the present ex periment is explained by the allegation that the difficulties due to the rarefac tion of the atmosphere only begin at au altitude of 23,000 or 24,000 feet. This view seems supported by the fact that in the Himalayas and the Andes heights of about 20,000 feet have been on several occasions reached without any incon venience. In such cases, however, tho ascent has always been gradual. The ill effects experienced in balloons aro pos sibly due to the suddenness of the change. London Spectator. How Peas arc Canned. The canning of green peas, which is now a busy industry in Delaware, is an interesting process. The peas are shelled by hand and then fed into the hopper of a separator, which divides them into three grades; then they arc put into copper kettles, where they are steamed just enough to wrinkle tho outer skin and intensify if possible the vivid green of the pea. They are then filled into cans, which arc placed on an iron tray and dipped in a trough or tub of boiling water, which runs into the cans filling them to the brim. ThU, water contains whatever of a preserva tive nature is put into the cans to pre serve the vegetable. The cans are then wiped, sealed and packed in iron cages, each cage holding 248 cans. These cages are put into air tight steam ket tles where the cans are subjected to hot steam under immense pressure for about fifteen or twenty minutes. The peas are then ready for market. Chicago Tribune. - The Least Intoxicating. CoL Ycrger and several of his friends were talking about the intoxicating qualities of the various liquors. "In my opinion, genuine champagne is less intoxicating than any other liquor," remarked Hostetter JIcGinnis. 5'How do you make that out V "Because so few people can "afford to drink it" Sittings. Principle and Interest "If you haven't read that book you promised to," said a lady severely to her son, "you show great lack of principle." "Ob, no, mamma," was the, calm re ply. "Not lack of principle; only lack 1 of interest "Epoch. ' t-ymwffn.i. i irSjI'M' A Talk with an Oculist A New York Mail and Express re porter watched for five minutes the human tide that swirls through Park row opposite the Postoffice, and counted seventy-eight persons with eye-glasses astride their noses. Then he went to an oculist and said: "Are diseases of tho eye on the increase!" The oculist adjusted his own glasses, looked critically at those of his ques tioner, and said:- "I think not. When I say that, I don't mean that our business is falling off. On the contrary, it is increasing every year and will continue to do so as people continue to wear eye-glasses, be cause they think it adds to their per sonal appearance. You have no idea how many there are who do this, and only one who sees cases every day, as I do, can form any estimate of the number of glasses that are disposed of in this way. "Young people study and read by dim lamp or gas light, and of course the eye becomes somewhat weakened. Then the parents ruih off to get a pair of spectacles, and oftentimes patronize men who will sell them any kind of glass, no matter how well it may suit the case, just to get tho money. This careless ness is dangerous and sometimes fatal to the organs of sight, which are entirely too sensitive to be trifled with. ' The greatest enemy to the eyes of young men is the cigarette. Recently a dis ease has appeared among smokers which is dangerous, and after careful investi gation the best authorities, who for a long time were at loss to understand the peculiar malady, have traced it to the small, paper-covered tobacco sticks. It is now known as the 'cigarette eye,' and can be cured only by a long treat ment. Its symptoms are dimness and a film-like gathering over the eye, which appears and disappears at intervals. If young men continue to smoke cigarettes excessively they may expect to be afflict ed by this troublesome disease ; and it is not relieved by spectacles." , A Natural Washtub. In the Yellowstone country a large ho tel is erected upon a great geyser ter race, and a dormant water-crater is the receptacle for all the house drainage; and in the same romantic region the Chinese laundryman attached to one of the hotels gets through his labors by throwing the clothes into a bubbling, frothy pool, and fishing them out when they have been tossed about enough. EggS are OTtCn PoltCil la the island goy sers, and bacon is fried in tho Hawaiian lava streams. In the Rotorua area of New Zealand the banks of the lake are so perforated with springs that every native hut has its own natural boiler, which is used as a kitchen. The Kuirua spring is strongly alkaline, and, on ac count of its saponaceous qualities,' is utilized as a general washtub. In Ice land to cook food in the geysers is a regular portion of the tourist program. Tea is infused with water from the Great Geyser, and trout are boiled in the Blesi, or hot-water pond. They require to bo immersed for about twenty minutes to be cooked to a 'turn. Monkeys Copying Human Vices. Dr. Jammcs, in a memoir sent to the Academie des Sciences of France, states that monkeys, unlike other animals, un less it i9 the human animal, readily ac quire the habit of taking morphia. When monkeys live with opium smokers, as they do in the eastern countries, where the habit is more prevalent than elsewhere, and become accustomed to the medicated atmosphere, they acquire a taste for the -pipe. One particular monkey, it is said, would wait for -his master to lay down his pipe and would, then take it up and smoke what re mained. If not allowed to do so for . several days it would fall into a state of depre: eio i and inactivity which would disappt ar as soon as it was allowed to "hit the pipe." Just What He Meant; A citizen of Detroit, who probably in tends to run cn the next county ticket met a farmer :ro n Romulus on Michi gan avenue yesterday and held out his hand and said: "Ah, fine rain this!" "Well, I dunno." "Do the crops lots of jyood?" "It will, eh? What crops?" . ' "Well, er you know won't it help the crops?" "It may soften up the dirt so I can dig up a few stumps." "Exactly-.-exactly that's what I meant. Beautiful rain for softening, beautiful Good-bye." Bat and Snake. Charles E. Jackson, of Halifax, Fla., has a pet snake that catches rats. Jack son heard a racket in a cupboard, and opening the door, found the snake had captured a rat and was trying to swal low it nose first - The rat was alive and strenuously protested against ,going into 'such a hole, using his ieet to atch hold of the floor or othfcr surroundings. The snake, wiser than the rat, raised him a foot or two in the air, and in that posi tion continued the swallowing process, dropping down to the floor to rest oc casionally, until the rat was swallowed. 1 Wanted to Chop It Customer (to waiter, who has just filled his order): Did you say this was a chop? " Waiter: Yes, sir. Anything the matter with it, sir? Customer: Nothing much. But say, when you are coming 'round this way Stelclim. 'TIS all tits same. As I look back from this long distant year. If on one day the Wintry winda blew drr, Or perfumed breeses brought a lightsome cheer 1 - - Tis all the same. So, when I trace the errors I have made, And reckon the good parts that I hare played, I smile as into mist they merge and fade Tis all the same. And when I count what I hare gained and lost, - ', And find that I have paid too great a cost For baubles that have in my way been tossed, Tis all the same. So now, though I may darkling glances meet, Or bask in Fortune's smiles and favors sweet. When I have coursed far down life's current fleet, Tis all the same. Tis all the same, When this brief hour has passed away, If cloud or sunshine lined the winding way; And yet, proud heart, tis hard, so hard to say, " Tis all the same." HUMOROUS. There are more falls than hops in beer. The average watchmakeT always has lots of time on his hands. A stable government should be one that is ruled by horse sense. It would seem natural for a carpenter to walk with a lumbering gait. A baker may have his shop in tho west, but his work is always rising in tho east. In the matter of speed there is a great similarity between a flash of lightning and a bit of unfounded-gossip. It-is said that 262 pairs of " twins were born in Chicago last year. This may ac count for the squalls on Lake Michigan. "What is this man charged with?" asked the jndgo. "With whiskey, your honor," replied the sententious police man. There are 78,000,000 acres of corn planted in this country and about that number of corn achers oa tho feet of its inhabitants. "Sliding on a wheel" is tho way a little .three-year-old girl expressed it , when she saw a man riding a bicycle for the first time. One of the things wo can't find out who it was that discovered that de priving a fowl of its covering was tho way to dress it. "Then you don't like hash?" said the l.iudlutly sternly. "I don't object to -bash," explained the boarder. "It's re hash I kick at." "Docs dress make the man?" asks an inquisitive correspondent Perhaps not, but it usually makes the man mad when he gets tho bill for it Fond wife Would you believe that Mrs. Eccles next door, speaks seven lan guages? Fond husband Certainly I would, she's got tongue enough to speak fifty. A New England man has just had a . patent granted to him for "an electric switch." It is expected that all the boys of the country will rise up in vehement protest. The present King of Spain is not yet 20 mouths old, and his court arc taking advantage of the fact to pull his nose while they can. It won't be safe by-and-by. One youngster Wc have a nice cano py top to cover our carriage. Other youngster That's nuthin'. t We have a chattel mortgage on ours that more than covers it, pa says. "Is your life insured?" asked the Judge. "Nq," replied the Major; "but I don't think I need any insurance. I may be poor now, but I shall get tho earth when I die." The bravest are not always the tender cst, as the poets sing. There is tho game rooster, for instance; he will fight a bird of double his weight, but he cuts up tough in a pot-pic. . "Wo ail have our burdens to bear," said tho minister. "There are many trials in this life." "Yes, I suppose thero are," replied the poor lawyer, ruefully; - "but I don't seem to have much luck at getting mixed up in 'em." It is recorded of a young fop who visiteJ one of the Rothschilds, that he was so proud of his malachite sleeve buttons that he insisted upon exhibiting them to Ills host The latter looked at them and said:- "Yes it is a pretty stone. 1 have always liked it. I have a mantel piece made of it in the next room!"- , There was a young belle'of Ky. ' Who said to her lover, "Yes, dy. Too long we have tarried, We'll shortly be married," So the youth was uncommonly ly. . What They Thought - Mr. Fiddle and 3Ir. Faddlo have met at the Widow Giltedge's. - Mr. Fiddle (aside) I wish that con ceited ass, Faddle, would go. Mr. Faddle (aside) "That stupid idiot, Fiddle, never knows when he is in the way. Widow Giltedge (aside) I Shall be uncommonly glad when "both these fool ish fellows remember that they nave en gagements. Town Topics. A Small Boy's Good AdTice. "Say," said the editor's smart little son, as he entered a store, "do you keep knives?" "Oh, yes," replied the storekeeper, "we've kept them for years." "Well," returned the boy, starting for the door, "just advertise, and then you wouldn't keep them so long." i Review.