$i)c l)atl)attt flftovb. II. a.'london,- ED1TOK AND rROI'IUETOK. ZrTjr Cfjatfjam nworh KATES TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, ADVERTISING One square, one insertion- II. fd One square, two insertions l.M One square, one mouth 2'0 For larger advertisement-! liberal eon rants will be made. $1.53 PER YEAR Strictly in Advanct. VOL. XIV. PITTSBORO', CHATHAM CO., N. C., JUNK 2:, 181)2. form NO. n. Shorn!. . I said It In the men, low path, I (ny it n tin' hioiinlniii l iir. ., Tbe best things nny uinrtiil 1 1 1 Are those which any mortal sharps. Tin nir we lirr:il ln. tin sky, the Incize, The light w itlnnit tis : 1 1 I within Life, Willi ilH iiiiIim KiiI lie isurli s, God's riches- .uc for us In in. The grass is softer to my thud For rest it yle'ils unmiinhrrcd feet; Sweeter to me I he iM rose rod. Ilee.iue .die makes Hie whole world sweet Into your lirnvenly lomliiicss Ve M i loollle.l me, O solemn peaks' Aim! ine in every (jne-l j mi ll ss Wlin reverent ;j ynnr mystery seek". Ainl up the radiant peoplcl wny That opens iuio world unknown, It mil ho life's li-liulit In say : "Heaven is not heaven fur me alone." Well through my brethren's poverty Sued woilth were hid is! I am blest Only in wiuit Ihey idiiire with me, In what I share williall tin; n.t. I.uey l.arcuin, in The New Kurth. THE OLD MANSION. I V M W K. I H l I'll. Mr. Mandeville had just come into his illicit on a blowy, bliio-kiod, )iu9. tering March ilay in iho n's, where tlio open grate-lire iroontoil an ap pearance of emu furl, ami the. clerk was busily oci'iipioil in engrossing leases for ilie coming lirsl of May. In an arm-chair before I hi: cheery rannel-coal blaze sat an agent, a Mull, red-faced man, wlio wiiri' a pepper-and-salt soil, and havod his couiilc llllliec very elosi; iiulei i. "Weil.'' :uiil Miiiuleville. curtly. "Tho oiil Waki'hani house is let," said Mr. Luray, "at iwelvo hundred dollni s for a boarding-house. No re. pairs." "That's good news," said ihe rieh 111:111.'' "Kvery hunso in the Windham Work has gone ell' at nine hundred like hot cakes," ailik'il I. may, com placently. "Very all) nelivti houses, (hose. 1 only wish 1 hail a iloz'ii more like 'em. Tlio place on Seeond squa'o need repairs; you'll la- obliged to have a plumber ami enrpenbr right oil.'' "See lo it, then." said Mandeville, beginning to glance iit the pile of im ppeneil loiters on his desk a liltle iiu jvitienily. "Ami litre's ihe Mnrand Mansion," ailileil Mr. I. may, "up on the H i I m liivcr ' "What!" crioil Mandeville, sharply. "Iu't (hat let yd?" 'It's my opinion, sir," snhl Mr. I. may, slowly, "there's soiuclhing radically wrong about tint there house. X 'limlv wants it. It's Lei n in Iho mai kel t In io successive yeuis and it won't go oil', nohow wo can li it." "Hul," Mandovillo exclaimed, "what do you mean? It isn't lilt II 1 1 (oil ? ' "Xot to my knowledge, fir," said the ngcnl; "unless Ilie tenants have chosen to get up a ghost for their special cdilicai ion." " I ho tenants arc distant relations of my own," said Mr. Mandovillo, a liltlu haughtily. "1 have, nut met them tor many years, luit I have reason to helieve they arc ladies." "lei haps so, bir," said Mr. I.ttray, dryly. "Hut it has oecurred to my mind, now attd ngaiu, as things will (lecnr, you know, sir, that pcilinp 1 had better go up there and see about it." "Xot a bad idea," said Mandeville. "I'll go myself." And ho went. The Moratul Mansion was a groat antique heii-o of moss-covered gruy stono on Ilie banks of the ll.irlcui river, with binders of yellow dat) aids outlining its path like ribbons of gold, and the earliest crocuses blossoming ! around its dooi steps, w hile hoary old J pcur-trcos drooped their boughs in the I garden, and a superb while-1 i:io tree ! spread its umbrella of black-green 1 thaddow over tho paved court in front. I Mr. Mandeville ran"; at tlm do -r- fiell, oliiiii iiio as he did o at lie: "To i Let,'' wh eh had beeoiue delaelied from its board, ami lav wedded in a tangle of j,r"o-obcri y bu-lies. . black- j eyed, handsome yoiino elf cam t. the : door, wiih a :n:iw ot j.'ypy b nek hair fulling down her back, and a faded j ralieo frock, which was neverl be ins i W'holo and neat. I "Is this house lo let.''' Mr. Man.le- villi politely asked. ! "Ye- e- ," iiiiwiliinoly mltiiittetl Miss Vuilic Yane, coiniiionly known as "Natiy," w il h a glance a the bat tered board which lay face dowuw ud nmoux the oo,,rbei lies. "At least the iioeiit inlil us so an I a cross old jji owl r he w is." Could I look at it?' 'aid Mi Mandeville, insinuating I v. It ain't convenient," answered Miss Natty, planting; herself within the door in such a manner that he could not possibly obtain an entrance without her permission. "Kill the 6g says Mo bo soon be tween tho hours of twelve and four,'" aroiicd Mr. Mandeville, consulting his chronometer. "And it is now half past one." "I ean't help what tho sivn says," said Natlv. bi.lli'.'ereinly. "It isn't convenient. Mamma is an invalid, and she can't have all creation tratnp iny over the Honrs above her head." "Itilt lain not all creation,'" said Mr. Mini do ville. "And I will en deavor not lo tramp' any more than I can help." "It isn't worth whilo for you to to come in," (-rid Natty, solemnly re g.irdiiij; him. "You won't like tho house, anyhow." "And why not?'' he (pieslioned. "It's moldy," said Nntlv, sinking lifir voice to a eontidenlial whisper, "mnl damp. And the ceiling in Iho blue-room has fallen, and the paper in Iho dining-room is all mil-dew. And (liu neighbors sny therc',s a ghost, hut I never saw it." "Ah!" said Mr. Mandeville. "I thought we should ("im. to it at last. A ghosl, oh?'1 "Yes," noddvd Netty. "Down cel lar where the bodies of some Uevolll I binary soldiers were buried ling be fore any one ever thought of building a hiMi-e here. They walk there tit night and clank their swords. At least (leiiuan (irctchen, who lived with us once, used lo 6ay so. I never heard any imise but the rais. Hut all the same, il isn't comfortable, to have peoplo saying that there's a ghost in the house." "No; crlainly not," acquiesced Mr. Mimdeviib.. "liesidos," added Netty, "(he hmiso belongs lo a crab.'" "A w Inn?" cried Mandeville. "A crab," said Natty. "The land loul, you know. Hi's a cousin of mamma's nobody knows how many limes removed. Hi. t I know ho iiiu-t be horridly st ilish and ini-erly. And I riilher like the idea of keeping pos session of the old Motand Man-ion, in spiic of him. I dare say he's dancing around the ll.ior of bis inuncy vaults now willi rage about it. Hut we had as much right lo'otir half of Iho old property as he had, no matter wh it i he law snid. And we aro beggars al most, ami 1 io is a rich mini." "Law," said Mr. Mamleville, dryly, "but not equity. I hat 6 It, eh.' "We've get possession of the old house; lhal's all I know," said the young i inlaw. "Ami wo mean to keep il." "Hill perhaps," said Mandeville, "he may not be as bad as you think.' Oh, I'm quilti sure of it," said Nutty, decisively. '1 suppose," said Maudcvide, look keenly at her, "that you aro Nalalie?" She started. Mow did you know ?" "liecause," he an-woied solemnly, I am the crab!" Wha'!" "I iiiii William M-uuIeville," stnil g roguishly. "Op 'H the door, Nattv, and let me ill. I want to see your mother, liou't be frightened, child. I am not angry with you." Natalie reddened indignantly. ' l'i ighteiied !'' she repealed, "t never was frightened in my life. Least of all al you. And don't you think you really tiro a crab, Mr. Will iam Maudi'ville?'' 'It is very likely,'' said he, wilh Uicat calniiic-s, "that I may have ap peared like a p-lii'l I ti-h of that iialure. Hut I assure yon it has been quite un intentional. I have tru-ted loo much to my agent. He told ni" you were desirous lo leave the house!" "Then," said Natalie, eneroclically, "he told a wicked, wicked story. Why should we leave it? We had nowhere else to o(. ' lie turned around and held out his hand. "There has le'cn a misunderstand- ing all tin d," -aid he. "Natty, shall wo be friemls?'' "With till 1 1 y heart. 1 tion't be lieve you can poib!y be a crab, after all, and I've been d dug you injustice all these years. And I'm so.ry lor il so there!" s,i Naliv look him into the shabby little boudoir, huno wiih velvet paper in imitation of Venetian tapestry and all slreaked Willi blue moid, where her mother sat cowciing over a tiro of ihiftwood. which Natty had gathered for her along the river shore. 1'or they weie so poor, so very poor, this mother and her daughter, thai even Iho lire by which thev wanned them selves w as a manor of eravo consider ation and coiitriv.iuco. Mrs. Vane was pale and putty as she int there iu die old silk which was one (if stie of mends and darns, but hiioj io'io wiin me air or a genuine lady to shako lunula with her distant COtlslll. Mrs. Vane," said the young law yer, with a smile, after he had ex plained to her the slrangc manner iu which ho and Natty had beeomo friends, nfler such a el range passage of verbal arms, "Natalie has shown me myself in quite u new light. It is a peculiar sensation to see ourselves ns olhers see us. Will you allow mo in some measure to right myself in your estimation and my own?" They had a long council of wave and means there, by the blazing lire of li if I wood, that evening and then they went ail ovor the house ,even down to the cellar where tho ghosl was supposed to do his rattling at iho dead of night. And Mr. Mundeville, still wiih his eyes fixed on Natalie's bright gypsy face, decided that tho property needed repairing thoroughly, and invited the widow and her' daughlcr lo visit him iu New York while the renovation took place. "My sister will be there lo chaperon us," he said, .mil I will endeavor to . show my little cousin Natty some of ' ll.e things best worth seeing iu out groat metropolis." "Oh," cried Natty, with her great 1 eyes glitlering like pools of jel, "how nice that will be! Oh, Cousin Mande ville, I do like you so much! ' " ill she dare to say lb it one year from today?" ho asked himself, with a curious sensation at his heart. Tor she was so young and pretty so like a raie-ripo peach w ilh the bloom still on ils cheeks." I'pon Ihe next year's lir-t of April, Mr. Lttray came to his chief wilh an auxioii9 face. "That old Morand Mansion, sir," said ho "I understand it is in perfect order, now, painted and frescoed Ihroiighotit, wi:h Ihe ground laid out by a landscape gardener. Am 1 to put it on the list of -To Lois?'" "No," said Mandeviile, brusquely, "I propose lo occupy it myself as u summer residence." "You, sir !" 'I am to be married next, week," said Mr. ."Mandeville, "lo Miss Natalio Vane. And we shall live there for tho ire-cut." That was William Mandevillo's lovc idyk New York Ledger. A Hangman's l!evem.re. According to the New York World cx-llani'iuan Horry's book of expe riences as a Koko m'ciiis to have fallen wiih some ihuicss. l'hers is one amusing im ideiii, nliliugh ils humor ous side doesn't seem to have im-pro-sod Mr. Horry. Some yours ago he was traveling by rail in one of tiiose famous compartments of w hich we read queer tales from time to lime. II. three companions iu this coop, which seems to be so contrived as to permit of unlimited insult to tin unof fending passenger, appeared to bo gentlemen, and what is more, ap peared to have taken a strong dislike to Mr. Horry, lie soon discovere I ibat they had in some way identified him as tho public executioner, and ihey lost no opportunity of expressing iu visible and audible and even tangi ble fashion the contempt and loathing with which Ihey icgarded his eyes, hands mnl particularly his shins. Ho didn't make an outcry, however. Two ears afterwards Mr. Horry went to Carlisle on a professional lour. Ho was there called on to hang Messrs. Hudge, .Martin and Haker, whom ho identified at a gbineo as his follow irave'ers and tormentors. I. earned ( hiblien. Mrs. Mary L. Hurl of Chioag.i, w ho has recently relumed from tlreece, says thai th 'common school children of Athens aro taught aneioul and modern tireek, l'loneli and sometimes I'.ugdsh. They have no school 'reader" such asalllicl American chil dren, but as soon as they are able to read they arc put into tho elassics of their own literature, so that long before they have reached mature vears thev are familiar w ilh Homer Neiiophon, Herodotus, I'.u'urcli and the dramatists. Instead of reciting nursery rhymes they learn the best myitis of Hellenic Ireralurc. One little Kirl of tin ago at which American children aro beginning to approcia o ilie beauties of "hickory, dickory, dock," g ive Mi-j l., at a graphic re ciliij of the labcr of H Monies. A Dark Mystery. (iood Little Hoy Does majority rule in this counliy? l ather Indeed il does. (iood Liltle Hoy Then how does it i happen that one bad little boy can get j ail us good liltle boys into so much 1 mischief iliood Nw. CHII.1U1KVS OI.I MN. iounmi s mo p. I ''"" 'i11'' innliiiK over the roml liayliKiit was raonix away; One little face, v ry fi ightem .1 atel snj. W:ilchiiij Iho shallow x at play; Two liltle eye., looking up to the skies. (Hie little ipiiveriiiK elini ; Two little lips parted iuiH" ntiy line lillle prayer to begin. one uj!C'l form comiuj; over the Mail - I'aj liit was failing away ; One kindly face where from niorniie; till I'lilleil ihe sunbeams al play. Two little eyes aitin r.iiscl m Ihe skies; I loii. lie.., the one little hr..iv -'Vo'i nieibi't take care of me longer, ilesr Lord; 1 can see (ruiulfalher im . " iTIorence .1. lioyoc, in l-'rauk Leslie's. Tin-: i.iAM nuns or i mii i. For two centuries or more, Ihe quiet liltle French town Douni has had llio custom of waking up once a year to w itness a s. eue w hich lias not ils parallel any w here in the world, The spoctae'e is a procession of gigau- tic dolls. At 1 1 o'clock on ihe first Sunday after duly inh, day-ant and his family leave llio Museum gardens, while Ihe chimes in the belfry ring the inarch of 'Iu (i.iyauts, ami crowds of Ouiai citizens ami visitors from all tho neighboring towns welcome Iheut w iih eiilhusinslic nppiaiise. (layanl Wears a knight's eosiuine, and a helmet with w hile plumes, lie is I went)' -two feet high, iiml his skeleton is a wicker frame. I le is carried bv men con. cealed iu Ihe framework of his legs, 1 Hohind him walks bis wife, Marie Cagotion. She is twenty feet high, ' and wears the costume of a lady of Ihe court of .Marguerite de alois. She, like her husband and children, has a wicker anatomy. The children are Monsieur dacquot, tw elyo feet high, who weirs a velvet cap and 1 Spanish clonk; Mademoiselle l'iliun, ten feet high, and dressed like her mother; and liltle Ilinbin, eight foot high, who wears child's cap and carries a raltle. i ne iiayants tiro lolioweil bv a followed chariot. On a high platform at lite btiek of ihis is a figure of fortune. In front of Foiiuue, on a revolving plat form is a Spanish gentleman, a lady, a Swiss soldier, a banker, a neasant carrying a chicken, and a lawyer with apoekelful of documents. As this platform revolves it keeps the position of mi inclined plane, lir.-t one cud and then the oilier being t.,ised lo Iho height of Foiitiuo. This illustrates, as tho "Sonj; of the (lay au's" explains, lb. it fortune change, and everyone, from Ihe gentleman t i the peasant, has his vicissitudes. I The origin of ihe tote is not know n. In ITl'ia company of gunners from , D uiai w h i w ore oncatiipe al Touruai, suddenly deserted ill u body with Iheir in on and baggage. The provost wished lo search fur them, and was very in dignant, but their captain said: "Ho calm. 1 know where Ihey are. ! They had lo go and see I licit- grand i father II ivaiit at D ntai. They will ' conio back." And in it few days they returned, well pleased wilh their holiday, and bringing with liiein a large number of recruits. Yankee Hiade. i in v i.i vi: in t in mi n. "Two curious litt e ti-lios live iu the mud," said Professor Theodore dill to a Star writer. "tine of them was only discovered ree -nily. It w as called after mvsolf.by way of coinpli. incut, being named Ihe di'lichthys.' My namesake is a sort of goby, from six to eight inches long. it :i hide in the muddy bank of a tidal creek, at the bottom of which it sits and meditates, being kept wet by the percolation of the water through lite sill rounding mud. It feeds on small crustaceans largely. One remarkable thing about the dillichchys is its mouth, which is about one-third the length of its body. It is good to cat and the Chinamen iu the neighbor hood of San Francisco dig in iho marshes for specimens. "The other mud lish is a native of the South Sea Islands, and is found on other tropical coasts. It bops about on Iho mud batiks when the tide is out, being apparently as much at homo on laud as io the water. People i call it Ihe "jumping lish." Suni"liuios , it will climb iho roots of trees on I shore, making its way upward by j means ot its pectoral tins. Often it j occupies the holes made by tiddler crabs. When it is hopping about on i the mud it is usually iu pursuit of the ei ustaceaiis or of a peculiar kind of slug that affords its favorite diet." Washington Star. Hei'sons who e port or import sil ver bullion will be required hereafter lo exhibit on entries and manifests the quantity f bullion in ounces line, as well as the value. THEY LIVE IX TREES. Strange Homes of a Tribe of South American Savages. Aerial Travelers in Other Parts of the World. There is a tribe of South American savages w hose singular mode of ex istence gave the name of Venezuela Lillle Venice to that northern province. The villages of these people are built over Ihe bosom of a great fresh water lake, which lies contiguous lo Ihe (ililf of Maraeaibo. These people long ago abandoned the land, and sinking piles into the lake, built theii houses on tl.eui. Hero nature's gifts seems singular) opportune; for not tnily doo.s ilie lake olb'r miles of sur face not exceeding live feet ill depth, hut Ihe neighboring mountain sides furnish a tree exactly suialblo for piles. This is a species of iron wood so bar I as lo turn the edge of tin axe. It foetus incredible that wi.hout metal tools the savages ciuild fell, trim and drive in place those trees: but Ihe evidence Ihat Ihey did is (hero. To further strengthen lie: piles, nature in Iho ooiiisc of a few years ot sub version covers 1 1 it-1 1 1 willi a deposit of lime, which practica ly converts ilicm into piilai s of -loao. Secure on these ulnlatitial supports Ihe native builds bis but, using no uiclal, nails or bobs, but once inoie going lo the vegetable world for a substitute. This he find iu the sipo, which ho uses green to bind beaiiis, riil'iers and other purls of his siructuro wilh. The slpo dries and contracts, and no band of iron could be more rigid or nearly as durah'c. Those savages are not by any moans the only lake-dwellers know n, for be sides Iho Sw iss lake-dwellers of pre historic times, there arc the Luke l'ra silts duellers liienlioueil bv Herodotus, who thus describes lln ir way of liv ing : "Flunks tilled on lofty piles are placed in the middle of the lake, with a narrow entrance from llio mainland by a single biidgo. These piles that support the planks till the citizens anciently placed there at the cniniuon charge, but al'teward they established a law to the following ell' el : " 'Whenever a man marries, for each wife he sinks ih-ec pile, bring ing wood from a iiiiiunlaiii ca led -belus;' but every man has several wives. They livi iu tho following manner: Lvoiy in in has a hut on the planks, iu which bo dwells, with a trap-door closely lit led in llio planks, and leading down to the lake. They tie tho young people with a cord round the foot, foaiing icst they lliould f ill into the lake bctteaih To their horses and beasts of burden they give lish for fodder, vf which there is such abundance that w hen a man bus opened his trap-door be lets down an empty basket by a cord into too lake and, after wailing a hort time, draw it up full of lish. " The Dyaks of Horuoo are another race of aerial dwellers. They also use the hard iron wood lor piling and el vale their hut- twenty and thirty foot from Iho gnuiml. Soine of their structures do-et ve i more dig nified name than bin ; for in . uc cases they have been known lo be over .'"- feel in length and capable of aecoiuhi odaling o" occupant. One reason for building on pile i the avoidance of snakes and other noxious icptiles so plentiful in the tropics; but the iuo-t important rea son is tltat the Dyaks place an extra ordinary Value on the human boa I as disassociated from iho body o much so thai, f-r hi head's safety, c.oh Ih tik makes of bis hou-e a fort. Near tho Doing. i Straits, on the c oast of New diiltiea. there lives a very singular tribe of Papuans known commonly as monkey men, from iho fact ihal they climb about iu the limbs of the irees with the ease and facility of monkey. There is a stretch of several miles along the coast covered with a dense undergrowth of mangroves. Through the w hole length of this wooded belt llieso monkey men fly wilh out stretched arms and logs, prefeniiig tiial mode of locomotion lo any other. A Woman's (iotnl Work. What may be done towards alleviat ing the condition of the poor by hous. lug them decently and surrounding them with sanitary improvements is well illustrated by ihe work of rv humane woman iu tho Philadelphia suburb of Wrightsville. "From boing one of tho worst quarters of the city," says the Philadelphia Ledger, "a menace to health and life, its iu- htibitnnts fast drifting downwards, it has been converted i to a good, coin lorlable wholesome, proli' able neigh borhood, and all by the personal supervision and care of this lady, who, in I Ms I, leased Iho property and undertook ils management. l!y hard and constant work she got (he cily authorities to do their work; Iho Hoard of Health, the Highway De partment, the Water I opnrtmciit, the Police, the P. iiird of L location, were one after the olher brought to ue Iheir power, and now clean houses, clean streets, good water, a good school, good niC'.ic.'il supervision, a reading-room and libraiy, lillle gardens make the neigh hoi hood atil active. All this bus been done in a sound business way, and n jw the income is about double what it was in the days of misrule mid injustice, although Ihe only in crease is the on cents a inoiilh for wtiior rales. Il continue to pay about per cent, on the investment, so that uflor deducting all expenses of super intendence, repairs, outlay for the li brary, etc., mid after repaying the owners their o per cent, interest, there remains nearly :! per eeiil. profit lo Iho lady whoso inspiration mid bard work have done so much good lo this sctllelilenl and ils occupants. 1 Lis ha been a moral and hygienic reform, can iod on w ith a business-like regard to dollars mul cents." I'.iioouraged by Iho success of this experiment, some wealthy people, who have Ihe u elf nie of the Iciicinoiit-d wcllers at hcarl, propose lo build a model lodging-house in one of the ihiikly popu lated pai ls of the city. They expect to make : percent, on I he investment, so thai Ihe iiuderlakiiig is relieved of Ihe obligation involved in charitable assistance. Vanisliiin- I nnn-. In an account of the vertebrate which have reccnlly bee tine extinct or are likely soon to becoms so, A. F. Lucas mentions Ihe follow ing: Tim West Indian seal, of which lillle is known, 'i he Calif' rnia sea olcphiiul, last reported iu lL The walruses, the species of the Pacilic, being iu greater danger from whalers than thai of Ihe Atlantic. The Luiopeau bison, al present diminishing in nuiu beis although protected ill Iho two lo ealitie w here it i-l. Most of the native birds of ihe llawaiau Islands, thioe species having already disap peared one nf them through the de mand for war feathers for the native kings. The I all torn i i vulture, now extremely rare. Tbe dodo of Mau ritius, and the solitaire of llodriguez, whno existing remains consist of a few bones. The Libr.ulor duck, of which on sj'ei iiiiens have been pte serveil, the last taken iu 17. The great auk, extol initiated iu I l ', though specimens are b -s rare than those of iho l.ibr.idor duck, while commanding such pi ices a oon f. i- a single skeleton, soi ot for a skin, and I ilooo for mi egg. Pallas' I cormorant abunda' I on II In ing Island in I'll. but extinct a hundred vears later, and now known only by four Muled specimens and lv niy-threo bono in ihe mu I scums nf i lie world. The great liaia- pagos and Mascai one tot toi-es, once very abundant, but ihe latter ext'n. t i early iu ;hi oenttuv. The lile ti-b, i i with one of lb" strangest histories known. It was first discovered in Mai eh, l.-V'.'. when a lilouccter schooner look about ten n ouinl; in ; l,M'i and I,! a few were taken uy j the steamer of the l ooted l ates Fish j Commission : in March and April, j I .', an immense number ol the do .d j lish estimated al hero than a billion j -were obscivtd ll lating over an area : ofo'iio lo 7oiu square miles: and no i specimen has been lepoited Mine. licnlon ( N .I.i Amei i. an. Muting I ami. Astiouomcrs of iutiago do Chile , find that the soil of licit cily is in a ; remarkable stale of motion. Al first j the changes, oh-crvcd many years ago on a mountain side wore siippoed lo j be simply dailv variations duo to the i heating of the rocks. Ion the dircc I lor of lite Santiago Observatory . which is siiuatol iu a level plain to ' tho smith of the city, bss obervcd i ihec movements, and sime last July ! has made them a subject of special study, lie learns thai the soil be ueath the obsdvatory is raised in the noilbeast putt during the aftoiuooii until aboui 1' o'clock, w hen it gradu ally sinks back until about 7 o'clock in the nun ning. This oscillation has au auiph;udo of three lo four sec onds. lbidos the daily variation, however, the southeast part of the soil was steadily raised from duly until September, and the eat part from September until November, when tho total chatigo had already reaebpj about thirtv-live seconds. A Sleep Song. Willow, win re Ihe rushes grow Softly .i-hing. softly swayitiK, Siiii: n music soft ami low, bile tla bree.i s round you playing liiiitly come - gently go. Wind that in tin trees dolli blow With s sweet foiluetivr sighing, situ: a lullnhy you know, I'reiimful n- the shadows llyiiiR, soini thing soft something slow. Hiv. r. a ),,u onward flow rooiiing songs of no man's making, Let me i icr si aw ard fto lib no thought of sad awaking liwii now - even so. - lreiii Noble, ill Vnnkre Illadf". Ill MOUOl S. Il is belirr to i cumin anonymous than to make a name and lose it. A wealthy uncle is usually allowed to have uis own way because of his will-ful character. There are some people who Ihiuk the music never ainouiils to much ex cept when ihey play lirsl liddle. A Woman somel iines forgels Unit fIic has tin innnoiial soul, but she never forgels llial sU Ims a colli plcxiou. It is lo be fern oil l hat there in emeu who owe careers of integrity to Iho fact thai honesty has a reputation for bei ng good pol ic c. Itewarethi swimming pool, oh boy; Mic h vi oe s,n!l be e,"ebin Who ..eek the wan r lo enjoy II. fore t hey lire mature. "I understand that vaccination is going on! of practice and is not so p q ular as il was." q I don't know-. It s ill takes !" Parent Now la m uilier, .lohnny Ak 'In' iliuggist for pu'vorized ubiiii. Johnny tat the drug store) (limine something for a paralyzed in in. Shu isn't mi inigel, she isn't a god. iless, -die i-n'l a lily, a rose or a pearl; she's simply what's sweetest, com plelcsi mi I iiealest, dear lillle, queer lil.le, sweet liltle gii I. "A p mill of coik," said Mr. Wick wire, w ho i fond of repeating news paper eioiico, "is nitli ionl to support a man in Iho water." "How long?'' iiskek bis wife. "LI;?" "I said, how long? you know be would aiarve to ileaih on such a diet iu less than a v-'eck if on laud." Hindoo Penitence. The Hindoos caie inoie for ihe brute than tor human creation. All abir i. c, cowherd - was carrying a calf ami lei it drop, breaking the neck of the animal. The hi ahinins excotn nniuic.iiteil him for i in nths ; no member of bis f imiiy was allow ed 10 (du ller or feed him; bo had to ui'lko a number of pilgrimages in a inend -c.ai l's garb, wiih a nqa around his in i k and tie' tail of the calf be had killed on his shoulder. Ile!iiruiig home uficr s'x months he had lo live in a hut by himself built for the pur pose. There he inu-t be purified. A baibcr shaved the hair i 11 The head and face of the peniieut and pared his nail-. Anolhoi man came and burned the hair and na.l a id sot llio tem porary but on lire. Alier ihat the luali fac or had lo ba' be hi the l iver until hi- skin was c can, when he could eotno out. Lvcu then he was only piuilicd but to t yd reinstated in the o.istc of cow herds, lb' hud tirst to feat fifty brahmins and b"' of his brother ahii's bef re lie could bo re ce.ved back in i he fold. Chicago lb-raid. Hying Place" of the l.lliinacos 'I he giianaco animal" of the camel tribe wli'-h have been largely domes ticated in ."S'lib America have a "diing place" al the sou born cxtrem ii of IVagonia. It i a spot to which all of llieso Leasts iiihabiiing llio neigh b u ing pi mis lopair at lie approtu li of deal li lo b 'posit :h ir bones. Dar win first rivoided this strange insiiiul of then", aid ni o'tisci vat ions havo since been lullv conliiiited by others. A ciuaiely speaking then tire several of thee diing place, the best known being on Ihe banks of the S inia Cruz and daliegos nvei. where the valleys arc oovoiod w ith dense thickets ol Inisbes and lice of stiiiiied growth. There Iho ground is-cattcied thickly with ihe bines of come less dead gen erations, die aniiiii iu moat eases having crawled, before dying, t e nealh and mil ng iho bushes. Wash ington Sin', V Man nf Ittain. Mrs. D'Vviioo (iiidigiifinily) hat '. Move oul of the. city and live iu ihe suburb? Indeed 1 won't so there: ( Mr. D'Avnoii t who wauls to econo mize) My cb-ar, a pretty woman like you never looks so eliaiiniiig as when silling in a phaeton at a subuiban railway station, wailing for her hus band. She went. -New York Weekly. r WI'si'Mi'